Extant research on the consequences of the Internet for non-democratic politics has focused on how oppositional activists leverage new digital tools. By contrast, still, relatively little is known about how authoritarian elites proactively deploy digital technologies to legitimize their rule. This article contributes to filling this gap by scrutinizing one highly innovative tactic that has recently been adopted repeatedly by Russia’s ruling elites: the organization of ‘Internet votes’ to staff advisory bodies to the government. In contrast to online petitions, online votes are aimed at aggregating citizen preferences not on issues but on candidates, that is, on individuals who later act as political representatives. The article presents an ...
The full-scale invasion of Ukraine by Russia in 2022 has put the future of the Russian opposition fu...
Is the cyber-utopian versus cyber-repression argument the most effective way to frame the political ...
This thesis explores the effects of social media on political participation in China. It explores co...
New media technologies are having a interesting impact in places where we thought political communic...
The research objective of the article is to explain why and how the Russian Federation implemented ...
The 2011–2012 Russian protest mobilisations were largely enabled by the rise of social networks. Soc...
The past 2 decades have seen an increasingly intense debate on how the rise of Internet-mediated com...
Against the backdrop of creeping authoritarianism by the Putin administration, this paper examines w...
What roles do communication systems, information technologies and the internet play in fostering cit...
This study explores the perplexing role of the Internet in authoritarian settings. We disentangle th...
There are far-reaching expectations that electronic democracy will increase political participation,...
This article is based on research of political participation practices of Belarusian political and s...
In the years that have passed since the social media powered protest movement of 2011-2012, the Russ...
This article focuses on the traditional notions of democracy and governance in the context of the re...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2021The Kremlin’s strategy toward the internet has evol...
The full-scale invasion of Ukraine by Russia in 2022 has put the future of the Russian opposition fu...
Is the cyber-utopian versus cyber-repression argument the most effective way to frame the political ...
This thesis explores the effects of social media on political participation in China. It explores co...
New media technologies are having a interesting impact in places where we thought political communic...
The research objective of the article is to explain why and how the Russian Federation implemented ...
The 2011–2012 Russian protest mobilisations were largely enabled by the rise of social networks. Soc...
The past 2 decades have seen an increasingly intense debate on how the rise of Internet-mediated com...
Against the backdrop of creeping authoritarianism by the Putin administration, this paper examines w...
What roles do communication systems, information technologies and the internet play in fostering cit...
This study explores the perplexing role of the Internet in authoritarian settings. We disentangle th...
There are far-reaching expectations that electronic democracy will increase political participation,...
This article is based on research of political participation practices of Belarusian political and s...
In the years that have passed since the social media powered protest movement of 2011-2012, the Russ...
This article focuses on the traditional notions of democracy and governance in the context of the re...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2021The Kremlin’s strategy toward the internet has evol...
The full-scale invasion of Ukraine by Russia in 2022 has put the future of the Russian opposition fu...
Is the cyber-utopian versus cyber-repression argument the most effective way to frame the political ...
This thesis explores the effects of social media on political participation in China. It explores co...