Effects of the internet on participation: Study of a public policy referendum in Brazil
Effects of the internet on participation: Study of a public policy referendum in Brazil
Does online voting mobilize citizens who otherwise would not participate? During the annual participatory budgeting vote in the southern state of Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil—the world's largest—Internet voters were asked whether they would have participated had there not been an online voting option (i-voting). The study documents an 8.2 percent increase in total turnout with the introduction of i-voting. In support of the mobilization hypothesis, unique survey data show that i-voting is mainly used by new participants rather than just for convenience by those who were already mobilized. The study also finds that age, gender, income, education, and social media usage are significant predictors of being online-only voters. However, technology appears more likely to engage people who are younger, male, of higher income and educational attainment, and more frequent social media users.
187-207
Spada, Paolo
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Mellon, Jonathan
dcc11448-b764-48a2-9f38-4fc6fdfa4cd5
Peixoto, Tiago
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Sjoberg, Fredrik M.
1c40698f-6389-4283-b2cf-3a5b8a6750a8
2 July 2016
Spada, Paolo
aa830424-63f7-4baa-aecc-0bba595b8221
Mellon, Jonathan
dcc11448-b764-48a2-9f38-4fc6fdfa4cd5
Peixoto, Tiago
6ff54d6e-c27f-40b4-997e-b1cc082b555a
Sjoberg, Fredrik M.
1c40698f-6389-4283-b2cf-3a5b8a6750a8
Spada, Paolo, Mellon, Jonathan, Peixoto, Tiago and Sjoberg, Fredrik M.
(2016)
Effects of the internet on participation: Study of a public policy referendum in Brazil.
Journal of Information Technology & Politics, 13 (3), .
(doi:10.1080/19331681.2016.1162250).
Abstract
Does online voting mobilize citizens who otherwise would not participate? During the annual participatory budgeting vote in the southern state of Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil—the world's largest—Internet voters were asked whether they would have participated had there not been an online voting option (i-voting). The study documents an 8.2 percent increase in total turnout with the introduction of i-voting. In support of the mobilization hypothesis, unique survey data show that i-voting is mainly used by new participants rather than just for convenience by those who were already mobilized. The study also finds that age, gender, income, education, and social media usage are significant predictors of being online-only voters. However, technology appears more likely to engage people who are younger, male, of higher income and educational attainment, and more frequent social media users.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 17 March 2016
Published date: 2 July 2016
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 434835
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/434835
ISSN: 1933-1681
PURE UUID: d127ebd6-afe6-45dd-993f-ff7f9af81fb5
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Date deposited: 11 Oct 2019 16:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:39
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Author:
Jonathan Mellon
Author:
Tiago Peixoto
Author:
Fredrik M. Sjoberg
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