Inicio Nosotros Búsquedas
Buscar en nuestra Base de Datos:     
Sólo un registro cumplió la condición especificada en la base de información BIBCYT.
Publicación seriada
Referencias AnalíticasReferencias Analíticas
Autor: Dutton, William H wdutton@usc.edu
Oprima aquí para enviar un correo electrónico a esta dirección ; Elberse, Anita aelberse@lbs.ac.uk
Oprima aquí para enviar un correo electrónico a esta dirección; Hale, Matthew mhale@usc.edu
Oprima aquí para enviar un correo electrónico a esta dirección
Título: A Case Study of a Netizen's Guide To Elections
Páginas/Colación: pp.48-54; 28 cm.; il.
Communications of the ACM Vol. 42, no. 12 S December 1999
Información de existenciaInformación de existencia

Resumen
Political hopefuls learn to use the intrinsic powers of information, democracy and the Internet. Every new information and communication technology seems to garner proposals for applications in politics and governance. Rapid growth in Internet and Web use has stimulated many initiatives aimed at applying information and communication innovations to create what has been called a "digital" "electronic" democracy. This case study reinforces the view that electronic voter guides such as DNet do not provide a quick technical fix to problems of campaign financing and the limited role that issues can sometimes play in voting decisions. DNet's novelty and limited use by Californians in the 1998 primary allowed major candidates to focus on their own Web sites and traditional media. The study demonstrated the Internet can make a difference in the coverage of candidates and issues in political campaigns and elections. Key questions focus on questions like the degree to which information providers increase their editorial role to achieve the critical mass and whether this will make Internet coverage of elections converge toward that of more conventional mass media.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

UCLA - Biblioteca de Ciencias y Tecnologia Felix Morales Bueno

Generados por el servidor 'bibcyt.ucla.edu.ve' (13.58.39.129)
Adaptive Server Anywhere (07.00.0000)
ODBC
Sesión="" Sesión anterior=""
ejecutando Back-end Alejandría BE 7.0.7b0 ** * *
13.58.39.129 (NTM) bajo el ambiente Apache/2.2.4 (Win32) PHP/5.2.2.
usando una conexión ODBC (RowCount) al manejador de bases de datos..
Versión de la base de información BIBCYT: 7.0.0 (con listas invertidas [2.0])

Cliente: 13.58.39.129
Salida con Javascript


** Back-end Alejandría BE 7.0.7b0 *