This document discusses how citizenship and political participation are changing in the digital age. It argues that theories of instrumental and communicative rationality are insufficient to understand political engagement today. Instead, it proposes that "expressive rationality" better captures how people use social media and online platforms to develop identities, socialize, and engage in cultural production - activities which can constitute new forms of citizenship practices and political participation outside of traditional representative democratic institutions. The rise of individualism and identity politics in late modern society emphasizes expressive and cultural dimensions of online activities that transcend traditional understandings of rational political behavior.
Hacia un método inductivo para investigar la formación de valores con respect...Alexandro Escudero-Nahón
Las condiciones económicas y políticas desafiantes están atrayendo a las personas a involucrarse en el compromiso cívico. Algunas de estas acciones están creando nuevas formas de participación y ampliando la ciudadanía activa, lo cual es deseable, pero otras amenazan los valores democráticos. La investigación en educación moral tiene el papel clave de descubrir la relación entre formas sin precedentes de ciudadanía activa y la formación de valores morales democráticos. Este artículo propone un proceso de investigación inductivo destinado a rastrear la formación de valores morales en la ciudadanía activa, teniendo como pilar la epistemología de la teoría del actor y la red, y el proceso de investigación general de la teoría fundamentada.
Hacia un método inductivo para investigar la formación de valores con respect...Alexandro Escudero-Nahón
Las condiciones económicas y políticas desafiantes están atrayendo a las personas a involucrarse en el compromiso cívico. Algunas de estas acciones están creando nuevas formas de participación y ampliando la ciudadanía activa, lo cual es deseable, pero otras amenazan los valores democráticos. La investigación en educación moral tiene el papel clave de descubrir la relación entre formas sin precedentes de ciudadanía activa y la formación de valores morales democráticos. Este artículo propone un proceso de investigación inductivo destinado a rastrear la formación de valores morales en la ciudadanía activa, teniendo como pilar la epistemología de la teoría del actor y la red, y el proceso de investigación general de la teoría fundamentada.
Presentation by Yanuar Nugroho for the "Knowledge Economy and Information Society" course, dealing with the use of IT and the internet in Civil Society Organisations (roughly, these are voluntary, NGOs).
New technologies, citizen participation and local development A case study f...Francisco Sierra Caballero
Innovations in the digital media have modified and conceptually redefined the conventional media system, with the introduction of new production and organization procedures. Technology constitutes a disruptive factor as an innovation as it opens up new possibilities and completely new features.
Energy Awareness and the Role of “Critical Mass” In Smart Citiesirjes
A Smart City could be depicted as a place, logical and physical, in which a crowd of heterogeneous
entities is related in time and space through different types of interactions. Any type of entity, whether it is a
device or a person, clustered in communities, becomes a source of context-based data.
Energy awareness is able to drive the process of bringing our society to limit energy waste and to optimize
usage of available resources, causing a strong environmental and social impact. Then, following social network
analysis methodologies related to the dynamics of complex systems, it is possible to find out, emergent and
sometimes hidden new habits of electricity usage. Through an initial Critical Mass, involving a multitude of
consumers, each related to more contexts, we evaluate the triggering and spreading of a collective attitude. To
this aim, in this paper, we propose a novel analytical model defining a new concept of critical mass, which
includes centrality measures both in a single layer and in a multilayer social network.
Integration of migrants contribution of local and regional authoritiesIntegraLocal
El documento `Integration of migrants: Contribution of local and regional authorities´ viene de la mano de Wolfgang Bosswich y Friedrich Heckmann quienes profundizan en la importancia de la colaboración entre el ámbito local y regional en el proceso integrador de diferentes culturas.
Here is a presentation I have made for a workshop in Bruxelles, on June, 12, 2009. I would have any kind of reflections and suggestions which you can send at damiano_fanni@yahoo.it thanks for your attention
Ponencia marco impartida por el presidente de la Asociación Kyopol -Pedro Prieto Martín- en el marco de la jornada sobre Redes Digitales y Participación Local organizada por la Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona, el 16 de Mayo de 2013.
Lee más sobre el evento en: http://rumboalorien.kyopol.net/redes-digitales-y-participacion-local/
-- "Challenges for the application of ICT for participation at the local level"
Keynote Speech by Pedro Prieto-Martín (President of the Association Kyopol) in the Workshop on "Digital Networks and Local Participation" organised by the Univesitat Autónoma de Barcelona, May 16th, 2013.
Read about the event here: http://roadtolorien.kyopol.net/digital-networks-and-local-participation/
Presentation by Yanuar Nugroho for the "Knowledge Economy and Information Society" course, dealing with the use of IT and the internet in Civil Society Organisations (roughly, these are voluntary, NGOs).
New technologies, citizen participation and local development A case study f...Francisco Sierra Caballero
Innovations in the digital media have modified and conceptually redefined the conventional media system, with the introduction of new production and organization procedures. Technology constitutes a disruptive factor as an innovation as it opens up new possibilities and completely new features.
Energy Awareness and the Role of “Critical Mass” In Smart Citiesirjes
A Smart City could be depicted as a place, logical and physical, in which a crowd of heterogeneous
entities is related in time and space through different types of interactions. Any type of entity, whether it is a
device or a person, clustered in communities, becomes a source of context-based data.
Energy awareness is able to drive the process of bringing our society to limit energy waste and to optimize
usage of available resources, causing a strong environmental and social impact. Then, following social network
analysis methodologies related to the dynamics of complex systems, it is possible to find out, emergent and
sometimes hidden new habits of electricity usage. Through an initial Critical Mass, involving a multitude of
consumers, each related to more contexts, we evaluate the triggering and spreading of a collective attitude. To
this aim, in this paper, we propose a novel analytical model defining a new concept of critical mass, which
includes centrality measures both in a single layer and in a multilayer social network.
Integration of migrants contribution of local and regional authoritiesIntegraLocal
El documento `Integration of migrants: Contribution of local and regional authorities´ viene de la mano de Wolfgang Bosswich y Friedrich Heckmann quienes profundizan en la importancia de la colaboración entre el ámbito local y regional en el proceso integrador de diferentes culturas.
Here is a presentation I have made for a workshop in Bruxelles, on June, 12, 2009. I would have any kind of reflections and suggestions which you can send at damiano_fanni@yahoo.it thanks for your attention
Ponencia marco impartida por el presidente de la Asociación Kyopol -Pedro Prieto Martín- en el marco de la jornada sobre Redes Digitales y Participación Local organizada por la Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona, el 16 de Mayo de 2013.
Lee más sobre el evento en: http://rumboalorien.kyopol.net/redes-digitales-y-participacion-local/
-- "Challenges for the application of ICT for participation at the local level"
Keynote Speech by Pedro Prieto-Martín (President of the Association Kyopol) in the Workshop on "Digital Networks and Local Participation" organised by the Univesitat Autónoma de Barcelona, May 16th, 2013.
Read about the event here: http://roadtolorien.kyopol.net/digital-networks-and-local-participation/
Talk based on upcoming book:
A Private Sphere: Democracy in a Digital Age, by Zizi Papacharissi, Polity Press 2010.
http://www.polity.co.uk/digitalmediaandsociety/bookinfo_privatesphere.aspx
Challenges of the Democracy of the Future, in the Digital Society (from Theor...AJHSSR Journal
ABSTRACT: This article addresses the challenges facing humanity in the Democracy of the Future, in the
context of changing the reality of the lives of people and organizations (public and private), in the Digital
Society. Democracy is a political regime in which all citizens, in the enjoyment of their human, social,
economic and political rights, actively participate in the choice of the governance model for the country and/or
region, in its development and in the creation of rules and norms (laws), through universal suffrage. The
challenges contemplate the human, social, economic, political and cultural conditions that allow the exercise of
power, free, participatory, responsible and equal for all citizens.The Democracy of the Future poses new
challenges to the powers (political, economic, financial, cultural), through a new systematic approach in the
search for a holistic vision for the constant improvement, of the satisfaction of the social and economic needs of
the populations. This study aims to alert governments and citizens to create the necessary instruments to respond
to the challenges of the digital society, namely social, economic and financial equality, working conditions and
protection of Human Rights.
KEYWORDS:Democracy of the Future, Digital Society, Freedom, Social and Human Responsibility, Social
and Economic Justice, Human Equality.
Communication permeates all that we do, no matter who we are. In thi.docxdrandy1
Communication permeates all that we do, no matter who we are. In this discussion forum, we are going to explore this concept by looking at the changes in how we communicate through written and spoken formats with the introduction of new technologies.
Begin by reading the following:
Mobile telephony and democracy in Ghana: Interrogating the changing ecology of citizen engagement and political communication
.
Towards the Egyptian Revolution: Activists' Perceptions of Social Media for Mobilization
Peacebuilding in a Networked World
Clay Shirky interview:
Social Media Acts as Catalyst for Policy Change
Technologies enable people to connect by shared beliefs and social movements, rather than by just national or ethnic identification. There is no longer a location-bound or time element in global communication. We seek out those who share our beliefs, and this allows us to harness the power of ideas across borders. Conduct some research into the power of social media to effect political change and consider the following questions, sharing one recent example:
Has the advent of “technology assisted communication” contributed to an expansion of the democratic process? If so, in what way(s)? Is this approach to democratic interaction workable for the future or just a unique event?
How has social media contributed to political change? Examine this question using the example from your research.
.
Communication permeates all that we do, no matter who we are. In thi.docxcargillfilberto
Communication permeates all that we do, no matter who we are. In this discussion forum, we are going to explore this concept by looking at the changes in how we communicate through written and spoken formats with the introduction of new technologies.
Begin by reading the following:
Mobile telephony and democracy in Ghana: Interrogating the changing ecology of citizen engagement and political communication
.
Towards the Egyptian Revolution: Activists' Perceptions of Social Media for Mobilization
Peacebuilding in a Networked World
Clay Shirky interview:
Social Media Acts as Catalyst for Policy Change
Technologies enable people to connect by shared beliefs and social movements, rather than by just national or ethnic identification. There is no longer a location-bound or time element in global communication. We seek out those who share our beliefs, and this allows us to harness the power of ideas across borders. Conduct some research into the power of social media to effect political change and consider the following questions, sharing one recent example:
Has the advent of “technology assisted communication” contributed to an expansion of the democratic process? If so, in what way(s)? Is this approach to democratic interaction workable for the future or just a unique event?
How has social media contributed to political change? Examine this question using the example from your research.
.
Debate on the Democracy of the Future, in the Digital Era (from Theory to Pra...AJHSSR Journal
ABSTRACT : This article addresses the Democracy of the Future in a context of dynamic change in the reality
of people's lives in the Digital Age. Democracy is a political regime in which all citizens in the enjoyment of
their political rights also participate — directly or through elected representatives — in choosing the model of
governance for the country and or region, in its development and in the creation of laws, exercising the power
of governance through universal suffrage . It covers the social, economic and cultural conditions that allow the
exercise of power, free and equal to political self-determination.
Effective and efficient political leadership in representative democracy poses new challenges to political
powers. Traditional theoretical and practical political leadership needs a new systematic approach to seeking a
holistic vision for the constant improvement of meeting the social and economic needs of populations.
The greatest challenge that theory and practice face is the identification of effective
instruments for democracy of the future and deliberative practices so that the decisions
taken are considered rational, transparent, legitimate, in Freedom and protect the human
rights of all citizens and that they feel respected, represented and committed to their
implementation.
KEYWORDS: Information , Democracy, Democracy of the Future, Digital Age.
The importance of democracy - A-Level Politics - Marked by Teachers.com. Essay On Democracy in India | PDF. Democracy essay | Democracy | Liberty. Why is democracy important essay. Democracy Essay or What is Democracy - English Essay. Democracy. Democracy Essay | Democracy | Political Ideologies. Democracy Essay | Democracy | Initiative. The Worlds Largest Democracy Essay Example | Topics and Well Written .... essay on democracy full - Brainly.in.
Citizenship and local development for the participation and digital governanc...Francisco Sierra Caballero
Cyberspace has introduced new habits and relationships into traditional forms of social intercourse and modern symbolic practices and representations. The formation of a new telepolis constitutes the main challenge to be overcome by communication researchers.
Research Inventy : International Journal of Engineering and Scienceresearchinventy
Research Inventy : International Journal of Engineering and Science is published by the group of young academic and industrial researchers with 12 Issues per year. It is an online as well as print version open access journal that provides rapid publication (monthly) of articles in all areas of the subject such as: civil, mechanical, chemical, electronic and computer engineering as well as production and information technology. The Journal welcomes the submission of manuscripts that meet the general criteria of significance and scientific excellence. Papers will be published by rapid process within 20 days after acceptance and peer review process takes only 7 days. All articles published in Research Inventy will be peer-reviewed.
E-politics from the citizens’ perspective. The role of social networking tool...Przegląd Politologiczny
The progress of civilization, supported by the development of new technologies, has led
to a series of social, economic and political changes. The information society, in its expectations and
through access to knowledge, has significantly affected a change in the model of democracy, causing
a kind of return to the original forms of communication in citizen-government relations. This has been
accompanied by a shift of social and civic activism from the real to the virtual world. In literature,
the use of information and communication technologies in the democratic system is named electronic
democracy. One of its forms is e-politics, which is implemented at several levels: institutional, system
and civil. A good example of the last type are the new social movements that in recent years have had
a significant impact on politics.
The basic research problem in this paper concerns e-politics from the citizens’ perspective, through
the activities of the new social movements, especially of a political nature. The main research goal
is therefore to present the role of social networking tools in influencing citizens and their subsequent
activities that have triggered changes in the political system. The methods used in the paper are case
study and comparative analysis.
Similar to The expressive turn of political participation in the digital age (20)
What Kind of Cultural Citizenship? Dissent and Antagonism when Discussing Pol...Jakob Svensson
Framed in ideas of cultural citizenship and acknowledging the importance of popular cultural sites for political participation, this short paper attends to a study of political discussions in the Swedish LGTB community Qruiser. The research is netnographic through online interviews, participant observations and content analyses. Preliminary results suggest an atmosphere that is geared rather towards conflict and dissent between participants than towards deliberation, opinion formation and consensus. This paper will therefore shortly discuss the results in light of Mouffe's (2005) normative lens of agonism and radical democracy.
The expressive turn of political participation in the digital age
1. The Expressive Turn of Political Participation and Citizenship
in the Digital Age
Jakob Svensson
The purpose of this paper is to connect the idea of expressive rationality to current debates on
citizenship and political participation online. Socializing, cultural consumption/ production,
identity management, information and publication strategies are both different and accentuated in
digital, networked, convergent and late modern environments. In the paper I argue that the kind of
networked and convergent culture that is emerging today highlights an expressive form of
rationality that transcend the bipolar instrumental – communicative dimension that has been so
important for normative theorizing in Political (and Social) Sciences.
Introduction
Today almost everyone agrees that the rise of digital communication and Internet has been
remarkable. Many scholars [7, 48] connect these transformations of communication patterns to us
entering into a new kind of society. With the possibility to communicate many to many in digital
networks, it is argued that we are leaving mass society behind.
Concerning political participation and citizenship the Internet is considered the new arena for the
political in connected societies, lowering the political threshold with new and different forms for
engaging people in deliberations about the structure and organization of our society. When more
and more people socialize, organize, contribute, inform and publish their concerns and themselves
on the Internet, political participation take on different meanings and citizenships are enacted
differently.
The purpose of this paper is to connect previous ideas of expressive rationality [52] to current
debates on citizenship and political participation online. I argue that the kind of networked and
convergent culture that is emerging today highlights another form of rationality that transcend the
bipolar instrumental – communicative dimension that has been so important for normative
theorizing in Political (and Social) Sciences. Socializing, cultural consumption/ production, identity
2. management, information and publication strategies are both different and accentuated in digital,
networked, convergent and late modern environments.
Citizenship Practices and the Political in Late Modernity
In our time, late modernity, the practices of citizenship are changing. Dahlgren [16] characterizes
late modernity by identifying two interrelated cultural processes at work: dispersion of unifying
cultural frameworks and individualization. The first refers to the increasing pluralization,
fragmentation and nichification of society along lines of ethnicity, media consumption, cultural
interests, life styles, interests, tastes etc [16]. Individualization refers to lacking a sense of social
belonging and a growing sense of personal autonomy [16]. Some claim that late modern
individualism is to be blamed for citizens’ withdrawal away from traditional representative
democratic sites [4]. But despite decreasing participation in parliamentary arenas, there are other
sites of political debate, not solely limiting political participation to representative democracy,
suggesting new loci for citizenship practices.
Societal and cultural changes of late modernity are happening at the same time as we experience a
technological shift towards digitalization and convergence. This is not a coincidence but rather
developments that go hand in hand. One point of departure studying contemporary citizenship is on
these technological and societal/cultural changes and the dialectics between them. The sociological
understanding of our time as late modern, underlines a cultural perspective with its focus on
changing patterns of sociability, the mental and discursive space where the individual and society
meet and relate to each other. Individualism and processes of identity are central aspects in
contemporary socio-technological dialectics, most commonly addressed from the concept of
networks, constituting the metaphor describing interaction patterns and sociability in digitalized
cultures [7, 11, 53]. The network structure underlines an expressive rationale of linking the self to
different collectives. Through digital networks we negotiate ourselves, and technology itself is part
of this negotiation [20, 47]. This is a mutual dialectical construction where neither technology nor
society or the individual causes the other.
But how are we to conceive of citizenship and the political in these new environments? Citizenship
has been used in many different circumstances, connoting different things to different audiences in
different circumstances [31]. The concept is usually understood as consisting of three components:
membership, participation, rights and duties, components that stands and fall together [6].
Membership is tied to a political community. Rights and duties are attached to this membership
together with the possibility of free and equal participation in the community’s political processes
[6]. In order to keep its normative force and relevance as an analytical tool, I have argued that it is
important to make a distinction between human beings generally and citizens [51]. The recognition
3. of some centre of power is important in order to address right claims and to accept duties and
regulations put on you as a citizen. Hence citizenship is best understood as a relation to some kind
of authority [51].
Some argue that citizenship could refer to any group, not only political ones or the nation state [9,
49]. But the sphere where citizenship is enacted is commonly understood as political [9], or at least
it becomes political when certain actions and identities are performed there (which is increasingly
the case in late modernity which ideas of sub-, and life-politics underline [5, 23]). It then becomes
crucial to delineate the political. Defining the political is also an important key analysing Internet
and its democratic and citizenship potential. Techno-utopians tend to equate every link, every social
forum as a sign of political participation whereas others dismiss what others claim to be online
political participation as narcissistic self-promotion. It is important to underline that interactivity
isn’t automatically political, it has to be made political [2]. Thus it is crucial to know what we are
talking about when we label some practices as political or and others as non-political.
The political has been conceived as a social construction, continuously being defined by the
practices labelled as political [15]. This broad and social constructionist definition of the political is
appealing. However, for analytical purposes the political should at least be demarcated broadly to
concerns of the organization and structure of society [43]. Power is an important component of the
concept, especially if linking as I do political participation to an understanding of citizenship as a
relation to some kind of authority. The practices of politics in these relations often depart from a
principle of equality, the equal division of society’s common goods (Rancière, discussed by
Arsenjuk [3]). Concerning this division, different groups/communities may have divergent opinions
and thus enter into debate in some kind of public sphere. How to address issues of the organization
of society, formulate ideas of how to divide its common goods as equal as possible, together with
my focus on the expressive rationale (a I will attend to later) of citizenship practices, concerns
discursive and relational aspects of power.
Political participation and citizenship is often discussed as a form of community membership
practices. In contemporary societies it is important to keep in mind that political community doesn’t
have to come in the shape of the nation state. The notion of community is not only tied to
territoriality, but also to interest. Defining community around boundaries of interest makes more
sense in late modern and digitally communicating societies that in many cases transcend state
territory and instead unites users around cultural interests, life styles and tastes. Community then
rather refers to a group of people with a common ways of meaning making. Connecting meaning
making in this context to late modern and volatile cultural processes of reflexive meaning making
also distinguishes citizenship from a communitarian view being situated in and belonging to a
predetermined community. The relation to community doesn’t have to be fixed [17]. Communities
4. in contemporary late modern societies are porous, casual and debated constellations and thus far
from predetermined. Meaning making as the defining character of community enables us to theorize
about citizenship, making the concept useful even in cultures characterised by reflexivity, networks,
physical and communication mobility and reach.
Combining the above definitions of the political and community, we end up with an understanding
of political community as an ensemble of people concerned with the organization of society and
making sense of these concerns in a similar way. When people then participate and act upon shared
meanings, address issues of the structure of society and the division of its common goods, in
relation to an authority, they enter into the practice of citizenship. Such addresses and practices
don’t have to be purposeful engagement, as civic republicans would argue [9]. In late modernity the
political may occur outside of the Parliament and all over the sociocultural landscape. Citizenship
practices don’t have to originate from within a self-proclaimed political community, but they have
to relate to an authority in some way or another. In this way we can distinguish between political
participation from other kinds activities.
Research on Internet from a citizenship perspective has mostly focused on new possibilities to
exercise rights and duties due to the mediums interactive technology and its potential to reach and
activate a new and young crowd [14]. This evaluation of Internets democratic potential often takes
it starting point from established and traditional perceptions of a representative democracy
consisting of citizens as interested lay advisors to elected politicians and expert white-collar state
officials. From a deliberative perspective, Internet is most often studied as a locus that perhaps may
approximate the idea of an ideal speech situation of equal and unrestrained communication.
However, these perspectives overlook that Internet and digital practices also are in dialectal
relationship to cultural processes in late modernity. Networked individualism underlines the
importance of identification, self-realization and expression for assessing political participation,
citizenship and democracy in contemporary societies. These participations are not always located in
representative parliamentary settings. In many cases political participation occurs from non-
parliamentary activist groups and the political can emerge from all over the socio-cultural landscape
online.
The Instrumental – Communicative Rationality Dichotomy Revisited
There has been a deliberative turn within academia. Today deliberative theories are influential
within public administration [51], sometimes leading to online experiments under the promise of E-
participation [20]. This deliberative turn has renewed interest in the well-known debate around
instrumental and communicative rationality. I will argue against both these understandings here,
putting forwards an expressive account rationality as more accurate for understanding and assessing
5. citizenship practices and political participation, especially in reflexive and individualised late
modernity with political participation increasingly taking place online.
Instrumental rationality refers to agents choosing from a range of different actions, and picking the
one they believe most appropriate for achieving the ends they desire [41]. Hence, rationality
becomes an instrument for reaching pre-defined goals. Through theories of New Public
Management, instrumental understandings of rationality had a big influence in public
administration in the 1990’s, not least in Swedish municipalities [40]. The dominant discourse
considered inhabitants as instrumental and motivated by their own self-interest, hence becoming
citizens when consuming municipal welfare, claiming their right to welfare programs. At the same
time as inhabitants adopted a more consumer-oriented view of democratic politics, politicians like-
wised treated them as consumers by marketizing the public sector [6]. Instrumental discourses are
still powerful today when motivating a digitalization of public administration. In her dissertation,
Ekelin [20] defines E-government as aiming at rationalizing and modernizing municipalities,
enabling to realize a better and more efficient public administration. Here, Internet and digital
technology are used within an instrumental rational discourse, providing citizens with better access
to, and information on, public programmes. The whole idea of E-administration is often framed
within such discourse [20].
Instrumental rationality has been widely criticized from many different perspectives [28, 36]. In fact
most late modern political engagement is problematic to understand referring to instrumental
rationality. If we consider the utilitarian argument of cost and benefits, it would make more sense
not engage at all (the so called free-rider problem). Muhlberger [42] refers to this as rational apathy.
And here lies a problem. Instrumental rationality may explain civic apathy rationally, but it fails to
provide a sufficient account of current political engagement.
Since the fall of the Berlin Wall we have experienced that capitalism and self-interest are not easily
converted into civic engagement [55]. Parliamentary politics has come to be seen as inefficient for
individuals to pursue their private interests [6]. In democratic theory there has been an increasing
interest in Habermas [25] ideas of deliberation and the transformation of interest through political
discourse [35]. Habermas contrasts instrumental with communicative rationality. According to
Habermas the truth in our claims needs to be open for contestation because they are inevitably
based in our life-world of background assumptions, loyalties and skills [32]. Therefore to deal with
our inherent subjectivity, Habermas [26] points to critical interpersonal discussion as the mode of
communication in a democracy. In order to understand each other and to become aware of our
subjective assumptions, the only rational thing to do is to communicate with others. Communicative
rationality occurs when communication is free from coercion, deception, strategizing and
manipulation (the ideal speech situation). Communicative rationality suggests that people are
6. motivated by a will to understand and learn from each other, thus differing from instrumental
rationality where people are understood as being motivated by maximizing personal benefits at as a
low cost as possible. Communicative rationality suggests that people not only are inclined to
address their inherent subjectivity, they also want to strive for enlightenment through
communication with others.
Deliberative democracy is inspired by Habermas and in opposition to the instrumental rational idea
that decision making is about aggregation and reconciliation of pre-established individual self-
interest [19, 30, 50]. Within the E-government, theorizing contains elements of deliberative
democracy (even though, as I discussed earlier, in E-administration, Internet is often framed as an
instrument to better and more efficient services). Ekelin [20] discusses E-government as also
considering citizens active contribution. E-participation is described as processes of governance
through deliberative discussions with the dual purpose of both empowering citizens at the same
time as reinforcing the representative democratic model of democracy [20]. From this deliberative
discourse E-participation is envisioned to benefit citizens, raise their interest for politics, increase
direct and active citizen participation [20]. E-participation is dependent on comprehensive and
sustained participation [20], and Internet from this discourse is often envisioned as form of virtual
agora full of ideas and rational discussion.
However, deliberative democracy is not free from its critics and has been questioned from many
different perspectives. According to the communicative understanding of rationality, ideas and
demands must be inter-subjectively acceptable otherwise others will not go along with them. This
has been considered unrealistic [13, 21]. Deliberative citizens need to be able to exercise self-
restraint in refraining from the immediate instrumental purpose of their self-interests [50]. This
attribute would need to be accompanied by the capacity for critique and self-reflection, an ability to
listen to others and be open to revisions of earlier positions [50]. It is doubtful whether this very
high standard of communicative action required is available among large numbers of citizens [38,
50]. This is not least illustrated in commenting practices online, where anonymity and accessibility
may lead to scornful comments, sometimes even hatred and defamation.
Before citizens deliberate, they have to be motivated to participate in deliberation. And in this lies a
problem. In accounts of communicative rationality, the underlying assumption is that citizens have
an intrinsic wish to talk to and understand each other. Thus civic disinterest becomes difficult to
explain in this tradition. This brings back the relevance of instrumental rationality and self-interest
for understanding civic political participation. But as I have discussed previously [52], while
instrumental rationality could explain civic apathy, it is more difficult understanding late modern
civic engagement referring to instrumental rational self-interested agents. On the other hand,
communicative rationality fails to fully grasp the nature of contemporary disinterest towards
7. representative democratic institutions. Even though deliberating citizens rarely meet the theorists’
strict standards of communicative rationality, these citizens do speak together, produce meanings,
identities, community, and public will in a way that theories yet have to capture [38]. Thus we need
other analytical tools in order to understand citizenship and political participation, analytical tools
that also considers cultural aspects of changes in late modern society.
Expressive Rationality
Processes of identification, reflexive activities of self-realization and self-expression are
increasingly important aspects in late modernity; these processes should therefore also be
underlined in studying citizenship and political participation. A study by Walsh [54] reinforces this
argument. Observing informal political talk in groups of old men chatting at the corner store and
women in handicraft groups, she argues that people neither gather to exchange political
information, nor to deliberate on behalf of the common good. When they talk, they are relating to
each other with the aid of social identities. Walsh [54] claims further that when people act together
in movements or protests, they develop collective identities that help them understand who they are.
These understandings will guide their future action. What is actually happening when informal
groups talk about politics at the corner store is that they are engaging in identity development.
Brennan and Lomasky [8] argue for expressive rather than individual preferences trying to
understand why people vote. They claim that while self-interest is dominant in market behaviour,
this is not applicable to voting behaviour. While agents are decisive in the market, agents are non-
decisive at the ballot box [8]. If you buy an apple, you are indeed going to have the apple, but if you
vote Liberal you cannot be certain the Liberals will win the elections. Therefore considerations that
predominate at the market cannot be presumed to predominate at the ballot box. Where market
behaviour reflects agents’ self-interest, voting reflects agents’ expressive preferences. In other
words choosing A over B is different from expressing a preference for A over B.
Their argument can be applied to political participation, and especially so in web 2.0 environments.
What are at stake here are cultural processes of self-expression, reflexivity and identification. When
people speak/chat together, form community groups, join online petitions, they produce meanings,
identities, community, public will, and above all, they express and publish preferences and
themselves. A focus on self-realization and processes of identification concern expressing,
maintaining and redefining discourses in order to make participation and deliberation meaningful
and relevant for the citizen. This is neither communicative nor instrumental rationality. This would
rather be expressive rationality. Citizens are motivated by a will to express, perform, maintain,
create and recreate identities and their meanings.
8. From this perspective we can understand participation both if citizens are motivated by pre-
established self-interests or not, and whether these will change during the deliberation or not.
Instead of understanding private and public interest as diametrically opposed, these can go hand in
hand, with one informing the other [6]. Political participation for example, will function as an act of
identity expression (satisfying the quest for identity) at the same time as the political community is
sustained by citizen participation. Citizens strive to improve the structure and organization of
society through political participation and they pursue the goals and interests that give meaning to
their lives on equal terms with others [6]. These goals and interests may be self-centred as well as
altruistic, hence both instrumental and communicative rationality function as powerful discourses
around which to relate expressions of yourself, and meanings of your life, to. Expressive rationality
then doesn’t make instrumental and communicative rationality inadequate, but it is a different, and
more adequate perspective understanding political participation and citizenship. Civic apathy, for
example, can be understood as lack of meaningful possibilities to perform, express and maintain
identities, or simply a lack of relevant identities for making participation meaningful. Civic
engagement then is motivated by meaningful and possible ways/ loci for expressing, maintaining
and performing relevant identities. Citizenship, and in the long term democracy, relies on that
individuals regards it as important to express their views on the organization and structuring of
society among others. The Internet and digital environment provide us with such spaces.
Expressive Rational Networked Individuals and the Other.
Discussing rationality, focusing on the expression and negotiation of the self, I have been
questioned normatively for my emphasis on the individual instead of the collective. However, the
kind of self-interest expressive rationality supposes, is not automatically in opposition to civic-
mindedness. The form of individualism occurring in digital networks, focusing on expressing
preferences, identifying and maintaining the self, should not be confused with narcissism.
Increasingly important characteristics emerging in late modern environments are responsiveness
and connectedness [22]. Hence, negotiating and performing our selves as individuals does not per
se imply a withdrawal from collective identities and community sensibilities. Here I find Castells
[11] idea of networked individualism enlightening to relate with the idea of expressive rationality.
Instead of being ascribed to pre-existing media consumption units, based on space and territoriality,
networked individualism suggests that we today have greater power in shaping the networks in
which we communicate and inform ourselves. In studies of the cell phone for example, informants
claim that the phone enriched their social life, furthering opportunities for self-expression at the
same time as managing and remaking relationships with friends and family [46].
If we address issues of the self we will come to realize that it is not in opposition to others. In fact,
we need others in order to maintain, develop, realize and express ourselves. For Simondon (referred
9. to in Roberts [47]) the production of the individual I, and the collective we, are inseparable. And we
need to develop healthy and corresponding self-images in order to remain mentally stable subjects
living together with others in society. Already early social psychology [24, 39] established the
other, social groups and communities as necessary elements for concepts of the self and
individualism. Therefore there is no conflict between the pursuit of individual identity and valuing
larger collectives and social groups. In fact they are dependent on each other. What is different in
contemporary media landscape is that communities and social groups also comes, and increasingly
so, in the shape of personalized and self-made networks [11, 48].
Digitalization goes hand in hand with processes of reflexivity and self-identity in late modernity.
Text messaging is one example where various ways of cultivating and reinventing selves appear
[46]. And this self-writing becomes an act of rationality for the writer him- or herself, in order to
capture and manage what is said and heard in the process of the shaping of the self (Foucault,
referred to in Pröitz [46]). It is then misleading to conceive of self-writing online, personal
revelations and camphone self-portraits as narcissism or a culture of confession. Instead Pröitz [46]
suggests that we ought to conceive of these practices in relation to the power of memory, and being
part of the storytelling of the self.
Giddens [23] claims that self-identity concerns how we reflexively perceive ourselves out of our
self-made biographies. Our personal identity needs a story, a sense of ontological coherence and
continuity in our everyday life [23]. Out of this argument it becomes rational to make our story
explicit, to express our self-identity. Giddens [23] refers to a reflexively organized endeavour, and
to be successful in this. The individual needs to possess an ability to construct, deconstruct and
reconstruct the own self-identity and biography. The creation of this biography becomes a source of
meaning and engagement [23]. Out of this reasoning, maintaining our self-made biographies is the
motivating factor behind expressive rationality. Today, this maintenance work is increasingly done
online.
As critical scholars it is important to be aware of that our expressions and biographies may be used
for commercial and monitoring purposes. These commercial interests largely operate beyond the
possibility for transparency or user insight [1, 12]. Issues of privacy and surveillance rarely get the
attention of citizens when it concerns the commercial sphere, implying a different approach to the
notions of personal privacy and integrity [12]. Private information is not understood as something
protected but rather something to be managed and used towards personal and social ends [12].
Christensen [12] refers to a form of complicit surveillance in these contexts. In a similar argument
Calvert [10] claims that mediated exhibitionism (as different from mediated voyeurism) concerns
well-directed and administrated revelations of personal information and selves hence redefining the
meaning of exhibitionism towards a more expressive understanding of self-revelation online. Thus
10. it seems that expressive rationality online puts forward the individual in way that increasingly
transcend, or go beyond, issues of privacy and integrity. When we negotiate and express our
personality and ourselves on semi-public, personalized and, to some degree, self-managed networks
online, the ideas of personal privacy and integrity becomes less relevant or understood in a different
manner. Here it seems that those with higher education and from a more resource-rich background
use the Web for more capital-enhancing activities implying a second-level digital divide among
Internet users [27].
Conclusion
The focus on interactive media and cultural processes in late modernity has changed the focus of
citizenship and participation, giving priority to processes of identification, self-realization and
expression. Thus digital media not only consists of hardware and software, but also meaningware
[33]. Meaningware draws attention to expressive forms, textuality and meaning making [33],
implying an expressive rational in the use of digital media. Rather than in narrow instrumental and
communicative perspectives, a focus on identification underlines cultural aspects, which is both
more interesting and more accurate when assessing political participation and citizenships in our
late modern age of digitalization and convergence.
People now have access to several digital tools that let them share expressive contents such as
writing, images and video. Shirky [48] claims that we are in the middle of the largest increase in
expressive capability in the history of humanity. We should not forget that sharing ourselves online
may be used, and is used for commercial and non-democratic purposes. Internet is probably no cure
against all forms of political apathy, but it has provided new platforms for political participation.
Sharing and publishing ourselves may result in new forms of citizenships. Citizenship has thus
become more expressive and more networked. Political participation is coordinated in new,
expanding and upcoming networks, providing new loci for expressing yourself as a citizen, as a
member of society and your social and cultural belongings.
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