I am delighted that Facebook and YouTube will be offering a platform for the public to quiz the party leaders and that the punters will get to choose the questions. But it is clear that the politicians will not go live and it will not be interactive. So only two cheers from digital democracy
With the rise of the Tea Party and the decline in President Obama’s ratings, the upcoming US mid-ter...
We are all heartily sick of hearing about how Obama used the Internet to get himself into the White ...
The Speaker’s Commission on Digital Democracy recently produced a report which advocated a number of...
I welcome the decision by the three political parties in the UK to enter the 21st century, even if i...
The Channel 4 News produced Ask the Chancellors TV debate was proof that networked journalism makes ...
Polis is partnering up with Channel 4/4iP on a series of national debates to be filmed for a special...
This paper presents an online platform for enhancing televised election debates with interactive vis...
Twentieth-century mass media have been described as producing a ‘one-way conversation’ (Postman, 198...
Alexandra Palace is part of the history of British broadcasting so it is a good place to have a conf...
Nick AnsteadTV debate proposals should clearly spell out the rationale for their invitations, argues...
The Speaker’s Commission on Digital Democracy was set up by John Bercow this year to assess ways in ...
Whether there will be debates this year in advance of the 2015 General Election is open to question,...
In this paper we tackle the crisis of political trust and public engagement with politics by investi...
Instead of asking what is so wrong with our political communications today, why not ask, ‘what is wo...
One of the key innovations in the 2014 European Parliament election campaign has been the inclusion ...
With the rise of the Tea Party and the decline in President Obama’s ratings, the upcoming US mid-ter...
We are all heartily sick of hearing about how Obama used the Internet to get himself into the White ...
The Speaker’s Commission on Digital Democracy recently produced a report which advocated a number of...
I welcome the decision by the three political parties in the UK to enter the 21st century, even if i...
The Channel 4 News produced Ask the Chancellors TV debate was proof that networked journalism makes ...
Polis is partnering up with Channel 4/4iP on a series of national debates to be filmed for a special...
This paper presents an online platform for enhancing televised election debates with interactive vis...
Twentieth-century mass media have been described as producing a ‘one-way conversation’ (Postman, 198...
Alexandra Palace is part of the history of British broadcasting so it is a good place to have a conf...
Nick AnsteadTV debate proposals should clearly spell out the rationale for their invitations, argues...
The Speaker’s Commission on Digital Democracy was set up by John Bercow this year to assess ways in ...
Whether there will be debates this year in advance of the 2015 General Election is open to question,...
In this paper we tackle the crisis of political trust and public engagement with politics by investi...
Instead of asking what is so wrong with our political communications today, why not ask, ‘what is wo...
One of the key innovations in the 2014 European Parliament election campaign has been the inclusion ...
With the rise of the Tea Party and the decline in President Obama’s ratings, the upcoming US mid-ter...
We are all heartily sick of hearing about how Obama used the Internet to get himself into the White ...
The Speaker’s Commission on Digital Democracy recently produced a report which advocated a number of...