Results 21 to 30 of about 57,073 (268)

Implementing COVIDSafe: The Role of Trustworthiness and Information Privacy Law

open access: yesLaw, Technology and Humans, 2021
Governments worldwide view contact tracing as a key tool to mitigate COVID-19 community transmission. Contact tracing investigations are time consuming and labour intensive.
Mark Burdon, Brydon Wang
doaj   +1 more source

Just what is data-driven campaigning? A systematic review

open access: yesInformation, Communication & Society, 2023
Discussions of data-driven campaigning have gained increased prominence in recent years. Often associated with the practices of Cambridge Analytica and linked to debates about the health of modern democracy, scholars have devoted considerable attention to the rise of data-driven politics. However, most studies to date have focused solely on practice in
Dommett, Katharine   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Data-driven campaigning and democratic disruption: Evidence from six advanced democracies

open access: yesParty Politics, 2022
Data-driven campaigning has become one of the key foci for academic and non-academic audiences interested in political communication. Widely seen to have transformed political practice, it is often argued that data-driven campaigning is a force of significant democratic disruption because it contributes to a fragmentation of political discourse ...
Kefford, G.   +7 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Public attitudes towards algorithmic personalization and use of personal data online: evidence from Germany, Great Britain, and the United States

open access: yesHumanities & Social Sciences Communications, 2021
People rely on data-driven AI technologies nearly every time they go online, whether they are shopping, scrolling through news feeds, or looking for entertainment.
Anastasia Kozyreva   +4 more
doaj   +1 more source

Data-Driven Campaigning as a Disruptive Force

open access: yesPolitical Communication, 2023
This essay focuses on the extent to which a new form of ‘data driven’ campaigning (DDC) is emerging in contemporary democracies and how consequential this is, both in historical terms, and also in reality for citizens’ experience of election campaigning. Specifically, does DDC signal the shift into a new and more subversive era of electioneering?
openaire   +1 more source

Next Step: State Funding for the Parties? [PDF]

open access: yes, 2002
The Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000 marked the most comprehensive and radical overhaul of British party finance for over 100 years.
Fisher, J
core   +1 more source

On the edge of glory (…or catastrophe): regulation, transparency and party democracy in data-driven campaigning in Québec

open access: yesInternet Policy Review, 2019
The 2018 election marked an organisational change for major political parties in Québec. They have all massively integrated data-driven campaigning practices. This article identifies factors that could explain the increasing pressure to regulate Québec’s
Eric Montigny   +2 more
doaj   +1 more source

Opinion polls, political elites and party competition in postcommunist Bulgaria [PDF]

open access: yes, 2007
Opinion polls have taken a high-profile role in political affairs in East European countries over the course of the past decade. Policy-makers, politicians and political parties made much use of polls in the early years of democratic transition, although
Henn, M
core   +1 more source

Economic performance or electoral necessity? Evaluating the system of voluntary income to political parties [PDF]

open access: yes, 2000
Whilst the public funding of political parties is the norm in western democracies, its comprehensive introduction has been resisted in Britain. Political and electoral arrangements in Britain require parties to function and campaign on a regular basis ...
Adamany D. W.   +31 more
core   +1 more source

Political Parties and Web 2.0: The Liberal Democrat Perspective [PDF]

open access: yes, 2010
Political parties have been criticised for their limited use of interactivity via their Internet presences, largely it is suggested because they seek to control their online messages.
Jackson, Nigel   +2 more
core   +1 more source

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