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Prototype Politics - Technology-Intensive Campaigning and the Data of Democracy (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,136
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Prototype Politics - Technology-Intensive Campaigning and the Data of Democracy (Paperback)
Series: Oxford Studies in Digital Politics
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Given the advanced state of digital technology and social media,
one would think that the Democratic and Republican Parties would be
reasonably well-matched in terms of their technology uptake and
sophistication. But as past presidential campaigns have shown, this
is not the case. So what explains this odd disparity? Political
scientists have shown that Republicans effectively used the
strategy of party building and networking to gain campaign and
electoral advantage throughout the twentieth century. In Prototype
Politics, Daniel Kreiss argues that contemporary campaigning has
entered a new technology-intensive era that the Democratic Party
has engaged to not only gain traction against the Republicans, but
to shape the new electoral context and define what electoral
participation means in the twenty-first century. Prototype Politics
provides an analytical framework for understanding why and how
campaigns are newly technology-intensive, and why digital media,
data, and analytics are at the forefront of contemporary electoral
dynamics. The book discusses the importance of infrastructure, the
contexts within which technological innovation happens, and how the
collective making of prototypes shapes parties and their
technological futures. Drawing on an analysis of the careers of 629
presidential campaign staffers from 2004-2012, as well as
interviews with party elites on both sides of the aisle, Prototype
Politics details how and why the Democrats invested more in
technology, were able to attract staffers with specialized
expertise to work in electoral politics, and founded an array of
firms to diffuse technological innovations down ballot and across
election cycles. Taken together, this book shows how the
differences between the major party campaigns on display in 2012
were shaped by their institutional histories since 2004, as well as
that of their extended network of allied organizations. In the
process, this book argues that scholars need to understand how
technological development around politics happens in time and how
the dynamics on display during presidential cycles are the outcome
of longer processes.
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