• Title/Summary/Keyword: on-line civic participation

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Differentiated impacts of SNSs on Participatory Social Capital in Korea

  • Hwang, Dukyun;Paek, Mi Yon
    • International Journal of Internet, Broadcasting and Communication
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    • v.8 no.3
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    • pp.1-11
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    • 2016
  • This study investigates whether different SNS with different characteristics have different impacts on participatory social capital in Korea. At least in Korea, SNS are categorized into five types (community, blog, micro-blog, profile-based service and instant message service), and participatory social capital is specified by three types (off-line political participation, on-line political participation, on-line civic engagement). Using Nielsen KoreanClick's web-based survey data, our regression analysis shows that SNS which are more open and focused on information sharing contribute more to participatory social capital.

A Geographical Study on Characteristics of Political Activities in Cyberspace and Interrelationship between Online and Offline: A case of South Korea's Presidential Election in 2012 (가상공간에서의 정치 활동의 특징과 오프라인 환경과의 연계성에 대한 지리적 고찰: 2012년 대통령 선거를 사례로)

  • Park, Sookyung
    • Journal of the Korean Geographical Society
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    • v.48 no.5
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    • pp.686-708
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    • 2013
  • The goal of this investigation is to examine the matter as to how various cyberpolitical activities such as on-line civic participation, cyber parties, development and movement of civil society networks are appeared in cyberspace; and how political activities in cyberspace are associated with offline environment. This research was based on in-depth and open-ended interviews centering around 20s (32 interviewees) and the major results are as in the following. First, in terms of on-line civic participation, searching political issues occur in places, where internet users can access information easily relatively, and creating or reconstructing political information is identified in places giving stability or affinity to the public society. Second, even though each party's homepage for the channel of cyber parties has enough capacity as bridgespace, which takes charge of supporting f lows of people, goods, capital, and ideas, most of them don't play a role to establish virtual or real networks. Exceptively, cyber parties contribute to make temporalized places, where nobody takes the responsibility, somewhat. Third, the development and movement of civil society networks is divided into several segments according to political interests and tendency in online; furthermore, such a cyberpolitical activity influences human networks and the decision of major places for political activities in offline.

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