TY - JOUR
T1 - Local groups online
T2 - Political learning and participation
AU - Kavanaugh, Andrea L.
AU - Zin, Than Than
AU - Rosson, Mary Beth
AU - Carroll, John M.
AU - Schmitz, Joseph
AU - Kim, B. Joon
N1 - Funding Information:
The present paper reports on findings from two rounds conducted one year apart (Fall 2001 and Fall 2002) of household survey data that was part of a larger research project (EPIC) investigating community computing in Blacksburg and Montgomery County, Virginia. The EPIC project was conducted with support from the National Science Foundation (2001–2003). Our strategy to recruit households for these surveys was based upon using a representative sample that matched the population demographics of Blacksburg and Montgomery County, a total population of roughly 77,500 comprising 27,000 households (Kavanaugh et al., 2000), about half of which were in Blacksburg or the surrounding Montgomery County. Blacksburg and Montgomery County are home to the community computer network known as the Blacksburg Electronic Village (BEV).
PY - 2007/10
Y1 - 2007/10
N2 - Voluntary associations serve crucial roles in local communities and within our larger democratic society. They aggregate shared interests, collective will, and cultivate civic competencies that nurture democratic participation. People active in multiple local groups frequently act as opinion leaders and create "weak" social ties across groups. In Blacksburg and surrounding Montgomery County, Virginia, the Blacksburg Electronic Village (BEV) community computer network has helped to foster nearly universal Internet penetration. Set in this dense Internet context, the present study investigated if and how personal affiliation with local groups enhanced political participation in this high information and communication technology environment. This paper presents findings from longitudinal survey data that indicate as individuals' uses of information technology within local formal groups increases over time, so do their levels and types of involvement in the group. Furthermore, these increases most often appear among people who serve as opinion leaders and maintain weak social ties in their communities. Individuals' changes in community participation, interests and activities, and Internet use suggest ways in which group members act upon political motivations and interests across various group types.
AB - Voluntary associations serve crucial roles in local communities and within our larger democratic society. They aggregate shared interests, collective will, and cultivate civic competencies that nurture democratic participation. People active in multiple local groups frequently act as opinion leaders and create "weak" social ties across groups. In Blacksburg and surrounding Montgomery County, Virginia, the Blacksburg Electronic Village (BEV) community computer network has helped to foster nearly universal Internet penetration. Set in this dense Internet context, the present study investigated if and how personal affiliation with local groups enhanced political participation in this high information and communication technology environment. This paper presents findings from longitudinal survey data that indicate as individuals' uses of information technology within local formal groups increases over time, so do their levels and types of involvement in the group. Furthermore, these increases most often appear among people who serve as opinion leaders and maintain weak social ties in their communities. Individuals' changes in community participation, interests and activities, and Internet use suggest ways in which group members act upon political motivations and interests across various group types.
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U2 - 10.1007/s10606-006-9029-9
DO - 10.1007/s10606-006-9029-9
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:34548671895
SN - 0925-9724
VL - 16
SP - 375
EP - 395
JO - Computer Supported Cooperative Work
JF - Computer Supported Cooperative Work
IS - 4-5
ER -