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Web 2.0 Technologies and Democratic Governance

Edited by Christopher G. Reddick () and Stephen K. Aikins

in Public Administration and Information Technology from Springer, currently edited by Rodríguez Bolívar, Manuel Pedro

Date: 2012
Edition: 2012
ISBN: 978-1-4614-1448-3
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Chapters in this book:

Ch Chapter 1 Web 2.0 Technologies and Democratic Governance
Christopher G. Reddick and Stephen K. Aikins
Ch Chapter 10 Emergent Networks of Topical Discourse: A Comparative Framing and Social Network Analysis of the Coffee Party and Tea Party Patriots Groups on Facebook
Christopher M. Mascaro, Alison N. Novak and Sean P. Goggins
Ch Chapter 11 Whither E-Government? Web 2.0 and the Future of E-Government
Michael J. Ahn
Ch Chapter 12 Campaigns and Elections in a Web 2.0 World: Uses, Effects, and Implications for Democracy
Terri L. Towner
Ch Chapter 13 Measuring the Effects of Social Media Participation on Political Party Communities
Robin Effing, Jos Hillegersberg and Theo W. C. Huibers
Ch Chapter 14 Social Media for Political Campaigning. The Use of Twitter by Spanish Mayors in 2011 Local Elections
J. Ignacio Criado, Guadalupe Martínez-Fuentes and Aitor Silván
Ch Chapter 15 Government–Citizen Interactions Using Web 2.0 Tools: The Case of Twitter in Mexico
Rodrigo Sandoval-Almazan and J. Ramon Gil-Garcia
Ch Chapter 16 Secrecy Versus Openness: Democratic Adaptation in a Web 2.0 Era
Jeffrey Roy
Ch Chapter 17 Blending Social Media with Parliamentary Websites: Just a Trend, or a Promising Approach to e-Participation?
Aspasia Papaloi, Eleni Revekka Staiou and Dimitris Gouscos
Ch Chapter 2 Information Policy and Social Media: Framing Government—Citizen Web 2.0 Interactions
Paul T. Jaeger, John Carlo Bertot and Katie Shilton
Ch Chapter 3 Microblogging: An Analysis of Government Issued Policies and Best Practices
Paula Lenor Webb
Ch Chapter 4 The Use of Web 2.0 to Transform Public Services Delivery: The Case of Spain
Carmen Caba Pérez, Manuel Pedro Rodríguez Bolívar and Antonio Manuel López Hernández
Ch Chapter 5 Toward a Gov 2.0 Society for All: European Strategies for Public Service Delivery
Silvia Gardini, Marco Maria Mattei and Rebecca Levy Orelli
Ch Chapter 6 A Viability Model for Digital Cities: Economic and Acceptability Factors
Leonidas G. Anthopoulos and Theologis E. Tougountzoglou
Ch Chapter 7 Online Collective Action and the Role of Social Media in Mobilizing Opinions: A Case Study on Women’s Right-to-Drive Campaigns in Saudi Arabia
Nitin Agarwal, Merlyna Lim and Rolf T. Wigand
Ch Chapter 8 Web Monitoring and Strategic Issue Management: Dutch student protests against the 1040-hour norm
Dennis Kool
Ch Chapter 9 Web 2.0 as a Technological Driver of Democratic, Transparent, and Participatory Government
Nataša Veljković, Sanja Bogdanović-Dinić and Leonid Stoimenov

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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:paitec:978-1-4614-1448-3

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DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4614-1448-3

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