Going offline How online initiatives revive offline civic engagement Domagoj Bebić, Marijana...

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Going offline

How online initiatives revive offline civic engagement

Domagoj Bebić,

Marijana Grbeša, MSc

Faculty of Political Science

University of Zagreb

Identity

Two perspectives• I (individual identity) – psychological

constructs/influences of social interaction

• We (collective identity)

Collective identity

Shared definition produced by several interaction individuals who are concerned with the orientations of their actions as well as the field of opportunities and constraints in which their actions take place (Mellucci, 1989)

Collective identity

• Members of the Internet community continually work to reincorporate their experience of themselves and of others‘ selves into integrated, consistent wholes

• Presumption of an offline identity which continues to live offline is a precondition for discussion that person pursue his/her interests and causes which continue to exist both in virtual and physical world

Erosion of Social Capital (Putnam)

Dissolution of communityDecline in membership of social groups and voluntary associations, and in many forms of collective political participation such as attending town hall meetings or working for political parties (Putnam 1995)

Erosion of Social Capital (causes)

• Structure of US economy • Changes in the family• Growth of the welfare state• Emergence of television (alienation of people)

Crisis of Public Communicationpolitical disengagementCommon practices in political communications as deployed by the news media and by party campaigns hinder civic engagement, meaning learning about public affairs, trust in government and political activism (Blumler and Gurevitch 1995, Rosen 1996)

Both concepts

If we agree that it is the engagement of citizens that provides the building blocks of successful democracy then concern them stems from both concepts is hardly surprising

New communication technologies

Appear to have opened up new spaces for public and private participation as well as broadened public participation in political matters

Virtual Communities

Individuals engage in online communication thus creating virtual communities

“the social aggregations that emerges from the Internet when enough people carry on public discussions long enough and with sufficient human feeling to form webs of personal relationships”(Rheingold)

Citizens reconnect• Interactivity as a key element to change the nature of citizens’ participation in politics and public life in general• Internet with a potential to restore public sphere providing forum in which citizens debate issues of public concern (Coleman; Street)• Cyberspace as generating a new world order based on international communication and popular empowerment (Negroponte, 1996)

Basic conclusion

Reinvent community in cyberspace and political participation will follow (Chadwick, 2006)

Enabling View

as medication for the perceived ills of modern society: isolation, fragmentation, competitive individualism, the erosion of local identities, the decline of traditional religious and family structures and the downplaying of emotional forms of attachment and communication

Internet

Group identity

Real world

Group identity

Real world

Group action

Enabling View: Two-folded solution

• Internet is seen to have potential to engage people into public discussion about matters of common concern thus bringing politics back to the people and restoring public sphere – Habermasian sense of reengagement

Enabling View: Two-folded solution

• Internet is believed to have capacity to restore broken social ties – Putnam’s sense of reengagement

Disabling View (concerns)

• The only functional community is the one based on a face-to-face communication (Putnam)

• Poor quality of interaction between individuals, tendency to produce plurality of deeply segmented political associations

Examples

• Move On (Habermas)• Meet Up (Putnam)

Move On

Move On

Meet Up

Meet Up

Examples

Both initiatives have clearly demonstrated capacity:a) provide a platform to elaborate the cause people can identifyb) build group cohesion strong enough to encouragec) real action

Conclusion (Assumptions developed)

I. Online interactions in virtual communities have the potential to create group identity hence providing a source of content that has the capacity to transform virtual into physical communities.

Conclusion (Assumptions developed)

II. These virtually created and physical consumed communities have the capacity to induce public action and positively contribute to civic engagement

Conclusion

Presented initiatives have managed to deploy alternative communication channels to positively contribute to public engagement in both Habermasian sense and Putnam’s sense and that is a value per se

Avenue of future research

• To closely examine the nature and the dynamics of these virtually created and physically consumed communities

• Compare them to traditional “real life” groups and communities

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