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Motivating eParticipation in Authoritarian Countries

Wakabi, Wairagala, 1971- (author)
Örebro universitet,Handelshögskolan vid Örebro Universitet
Grönlund, Åke, Professor (thesis advisor)
Örebro universitet,Handelshögskolan vid Örebro Universitet
Avdic, Anders, PhD (thesis advisor)
Örebro universitet,Handelshögskolan vid Örebro Universitet
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Islam, Sirajul, PhD (thesis advisor)
Örebro universitet,Handelshögskolan vid Örebro Universitet
Normann Andersen, Kim, Professor (opponent)
Copenhagen Business School
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 (creator_code:org_t)
ISBN 9789175291369
Örebro : Örebro university, 2016
English 143 s.
Series: Örebro Studies in Informatics ; 11
  • Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)
Abstract Subject headings
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  • Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) can enrich the ways in which citizens participate in civic and political matters. Indeed, many theorists on online participation, or eParticipation, proclaim the potential of digital technologies to empower citizens with convenient ways to participate in democratic processes and to hold leaders to account. However, it is not clear if and how digital technologies, notably social media, can contribute to a more democratic system and engaged public in a country where open expression is limited. This thesis studies Social Networking Sites (SNS) as Information Systems (IS) artefacts, including individuals’ motivation for using them, how their features enable participation - or not - and the impacts of their use in an authoritarian country.Through personal interviews and focus group discussions in Uganda, this thesis finds that the common enablers of online participation in often-studied, mostly Western democratic countries are rarely translated into the offline world in an authoritarian country with one president for the last 30 years. The thesis proposes ways to increase eParticipation in authoritarian contexts, citing the social accountability sector (where the thesis shows evidence of eParticipation working) as a pathway to greater citizen participation and government responsiveness. Findings also contribute to the Information Systems artefact discourse by illuminating the political, social, technological, and information artefacts in SNS when used for eParticipation. Moreover, the thesis shows how, in contexts with a democracy deficit, resource-based theories such as the Civic Voluntarism Model (CVM) fall short in explaining what motivates political participation. It also explains how social networks contain the various constitutive aspects of the IS artefact – social, technical, informational and political - and how these various aspects need to be aligned for eParticipation to work.

Subject headings

SAMHÄLLSVETENSKAP  -- Medie- och kommunikationsvetenskap -- Systemvetenskap, informationssystem och informatik med samhällsvetenskaplig inriktning (hsv//swe)
SOCIAL SCIENCES  -- Media and Communications -- Information Systems, Social aspects (hsv//eng)

Keyword

Civic voluntarism
IS artefact
Uganda
eParticipation
citizen participation
social networking sites
authoritarian regime
ICT4D
Informatik
Informatics

Publication and Content Type

vet (subject category)
dok (subject category)

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