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Beyond Election Campaigns: Political Parties and the Use of Digitalization in Daily Politics

Parties and elections
Institutions
TOU002
Sergiu Gherghina
University of Glasgow
Oscar Barberà
University of Valencia

Building: B, Floor: 4, Room: MB404

Tuesday 09:00 - 17:00 CEST (25/04/2023)

Wednesday 09:00 - 17:00 CEST (26/04/2023)

Thursday 09:00 - 17:00 CEST (27/04/2023)

Friday 09:00 - 17:00 CEST (28/04/2023)

Political parties have adapted to the increasing importance of the digital environment in people’s lives. Over the last two decades, the literature on the relationship between political parties and digitalization has flourished and developed in three main directions. One strand focuses extensively on political communication and marketing, showing how political parties use websites, internet platforms or social media to communicate with voters and seek electoral support (Cameron, Barrett and Stewardson, 2016; Kreiss, 2016; Magin et al., 2017; Spierings and Jacobs, 2018). A second line of enquiry investigates the effects of digital communication on voters in the form of online epistemic bubbles, echo-chambers, filters, or ideological polarization (Flaxman, Goel and Rao, 2016; Geschke, Lorenz and Holtz, 2019; Humprecht, Hellmueller and Lischka, 2020). A third direction of research looks at the digital innovations for party organization, including intra-party decision-making and the general challenges associated with them (Gerbaudo, 2019; Deseriis, 2020; Barberà et al., 2021; De Marco et al., 2022). All these indicate that we know much about how parties use digitalization during elections but that there is limited information about its role in party politics between elections. There is also an important territorial imbalance in the literature, with most of the research conducted on advanced democracies rather than new democracies or democratizing countries. This Workshop seeks to address both gaps in the literature by focusing on three specific and under-studied dimensions for analysis:  intra-party communication  attitudes towards digitalization  the appeal of digitalization to different segments in society, and how these segments use it. This approach is scientifically relevant because it may provide a detailed view about the role of digitalization in everyday political life. A great deal of party activities take place between elections and at various levels of representation (local, regional and central) and may involve different actors (e.g. social movements, interest groups, etc.). Moreover, understanding the mechanisms associated with party digitalization and peoples’ attitudes – inside and outside parties – can inform future organizational changes in the direction of using more (or less) digitalization and the functions developed by distinct digital tools or platforms. Knowledge from different territorial realities might also point out different adaptation strategies and uses of the digital. The Workshop has four objectives. It aims to: 1. Address theoretically the relationship between political parties and digitalization in everyday politics, beyond electoral communication and gains. 2. Analyze the ways digitalization influences internal party communication: how and why staff do things differently online vs offline, how political activities change, and with what consequences (linkage, internal party democracy, staff change, (de)institutionalisation, etc.) for the party, or how party members engage online post-pandemic. 3. Identify and explain the attitudes of voters, members and political elites towards digitalization – or its absence – of their political parties. 4. Illustrate ways in which different segments in party membership and the electorate (young, savvy, educated, elderly, belonging to minority groups etc.) use digitalization (or not) to engage with parties.

This Workshop bridges two subfields of political science: political parties and Internet and politics. Applicants are likely to be scholars in one of these two fields and, to some extent, political communication. We also invite Papers from scholars working on democratic theory and the politics of representation (i.e. responsiveness, accountability). In addition to welcoming established scholars in these fields, our aim is to bring to the Workshop a number of emerging scholars, and we are aware of many researchers conducting PhD or postdoctoral studies in these fields. The Workshop is endorsed by the ECPR Standing Group on Political Parties. Apart from members associated with this Group, likely participants include members of the Standing Groups on Comparative Political Institutions, Internet and Elections, Elites and Political Leadership, Public Opinion and Voting Behaviour in a Comparative Perspective, and Participation and Mobilisation. We invite three types of Papers: 1. Theoretical papers that discuss the link between political parties and digitalization. Such contributions should ideally bring an innovative angle and / or provide an analytical framework with broader applicability. 2. Empirical papers that scrutinize the variation in the use of digitalization across the three dimensions outlined above. These may include, among others, the investigation of ways in which intra-party communication used digitalization before, during and after the pandemic, why digital intra-party communication is used or with what consequences, why attitudes towards party digitalization differ, or how party elites and members have different approaches and with what consequences. 3. Methodological papers seeking a systematic way to assess the use of digitalization by political parties in intra-party communication, attitudes formation, and the appeal of digitalization to different segments in society. We invite single case studies, comparative analyses (small- and medium-N) and large-N approaches. We have no preference for qualitative or quantitative techniques of analysis. However, we expect Papers presenting single case studies to aim at building, testing, or modifying theories rather than being centered on individual instances. The Workshop will focus predominantly on established and new democracies in Europe, but valuable contributions from other political settings and geographic areas are welcome. We encourage studies on countries or regions where the scholarship on digitalisation is under-developed.

Title Details
Party digitalization and website features: a comparative study of party organizations View Paper Details
The role of parliamentary debates in reinforcing attention to issues on parties’ social media profiles View Paper Details
The Online Connection: Explaining Party Members’ Attitudes towards Digitalization View Paper Details
Law making and online deliberation in the Five Star Movement View Paper Details
Participation in internal party referenda: the Spanish case View Paper Details
Campaign Digitalization and Electoral Volatility in Local Elections: The Roma Parties in Romania View Paper Details
Deliberation, Plebiscitarianism and Representation: the trilemma of party democratic innovations View Paper Details
Data Driven Campaigning in the 2021 German Federal Election: An inter and intra-party analysis View Paper Details
The strategic mechanisms of online communication: explaining various party uses of social media View Paper Details
Party digitalization: a non-partisan matter? Media narratives on party digitalization in Bulgaria View Paper Details
How can digitalisation promote intra-party democracy in a populist right-wing party? The case of the Estonian radical right. View Paper Details
A distorted mirror? Intra-party Twitter communities in Spanish political parties View Paper Details