巨魔只是想要有乐趣:在英国电子参与和其他在线政治行为背景下的电子侵略

Shefali Virkar
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引用次数: 10

摘要

过去二十年来,在几个西方自由民主国家,由于公民明显缺乏参与政治进程的机会,公众对政府的信心和信任明显下降;而是让位于对当前的政治制度、行为者和实践的幻灭。互联网作为全球通讯媒介的兴起,以及数码平台的出现,为公共机构和机构带来了巨大的机遇,也带来了新的挑战。数码科技创造了新的社区形式;赋予公民权力和改革现有的权力结构,使传统民主政治的许多工具和进程过时或不适当。通过对英国唐宁街10号请愿倡议的分析,本文试图探讨与政府创新使用网络技术有关的问题,使公民参与现有民主框架内的政策过程,以改善行政管理,改革民主进程,并重新建立公民对治理机构的信任。特别是,这项工作试图研究在政府2.0时代,将新的信息和通信技术应用于参与式民主是否最终会导致政府职能、政策制定和政治体的彻底变革,或者仅仅是适度的、不引人注目的政治改革,以及社会中个人之间基于技术的、强迫性的病态和基于互联网的trolling行为的出现。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Trolls Just Want To Have Fun: Electronic Aggression within the Context of e-Participation and Other Online Political Behaviour in the United Kingdom
Over the last two decades, public confidence and trust in Government has declined visibly in several Western liberal democracies owing to a distinct lack of opportunities for citizen participation in political processes; and has instead given way instead to disillusionment with current political institutions, actors, and practices. The rise of the Internet as a global communications medium and the advent of digital platforms has opened up huge opportunities and raised new challenges for public institutions and agencies, with digital technology creating new forms of community; empowering citizens and reforming existing power structures in a way that has rendered obsolete or inappropriate many of the tools and processes of traditional democratic politics. Through an analysis of the No. 10 Downing Street ePetitions Initiative based in the United Kingdom, this article seeks to engage with issues related to the innovative use of network technology by Government to involve citizens in policy processes within existing democratic frameworks in order to improve administration, to reform democratic processes, and to renew citizen trust in institutions of governance. In particular, the work seeks to examine whether the application of the new Information and Communication Technologies to participatory democracy in the Government 2.0 era would eventually lead to radical transformations in government functioning, policymaking, and the body politic, or merely to modest, unspectacular political reform and to the emergence of technology-based, obsessive-compulsive pathologies and Internet-based trolling behaviours amongst individuals in society.
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