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The MoveOn Effect - The Unexpected Transformation of American Political Advocacy (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R4,458
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The MoveOn Effect - The Unexpected Transformation of American Political Advocacy (Hardcover)
Series: Oxford Studies in Digital Politics
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The Internet is facilitating a generational transition within
America's advocacy group system. New "netroots" political
associations have arisen in the past decade and play an
increasingly prominent role in citizen political mobilization. At
the same time, the organizations that mediate citizen political
engagement and sustained collective action are changing. They rely
upon modified staff structures and work routines. They employ novel
strategies and tactical repertoires. Rather than "organizing
without organizations," the new media environment has given rise to
"organizing through different organizations." The MoveOn Effect
provides a richly detailed analysis of this disruptive
transformation. It highlights changes in membership and fundraising
regimes - established industrial patterns of supporter interaction
and revenue streams - that were pioneered by MoveOn.org and have
spread broadly within the advocacy system. Through interviews,
content analysis, and direct observation of the leading netroots
organizations, the book offers fresh insights into 21st century
political organizing. The book highlights important variations
among the new organizations - including internet-mediated issue
generalists like MoveOn, community blogs like DailyKos.com, and
neo-federated groups like DemocracyforAmerica.com. It also explores
a wider set of netroots infrastructure organizations that provide
supporting services to membership-based advocacy associations. The
rise of the political netroots has had a distinctly partisan
character: conservatives have repeatedly tried and failed to build
equivalents to the organizations and infrastructure of the
progressive netroots. The MoveOn Effect investigates these efforts,
as well as the late-forming Tea Party movement, and introduces the
theory of Outparty Innovation Incentives as an explanation for the
partisan adoption of political technology. Written by a political
scientist who is also a longtime political organizer, The MoveOn
Effect offers a widely-accessible account of the Internet's impact
on American politics. Operating at the intersection of practitioner
and academic knowledge-traditions, Karpf provides a reassessment of
many longstanding claims about new media and citizen political
engagement.
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