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Can online deliberation transform citizens

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Group2: community cohesion (CC) followed by youth anti-social behaviour (ASB) ... Survey 2 Anti-Social Behaviour (ASB) or Community Cohesion (CC) issues. Deliberation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Can online deliberation transform citizens


1
Can online deliberation transform citizens?
  • Preliminary findings from an internet field
    experiment in the UK

Informing Public Policy Friday 24th April 2009
Hisako Nomura, Research Associate Institute for
Political and Economic Governance University of
Manchester
2
The project
  • One element of the Rediscovering the Civic
    research programme
  • Funded by ESRC/CLG/NWIN
  • Joint project of University of Manchester
    (Institute for Political and Economic Governance)
    and University of Southampton (Centre for
    Citizenship and Democracy
  • Variety of experiments (RCTs, design experiments)
    on aspects of civil engagement (voting,
    recycling, lobbying, pledging etc)
  • http//www.civicbehaviour.org.uk/research/

3
Background on online deliberation
  • Attempts to encourage deliberation on public
    policy are often local and small scale (e.g.
    citizens juries)
  • Information and communication technology (ICT)
    potentially offers new possibilities for public
    engagement
  • Opening a new public sphere of the sort
    envisioned by Habermas (1962, 1989)
  • For the public, a new way to engage with others
    to discuss
  • Online discussion
  • For the public sector, a new way to extend their
    reach
  • Online questionnaires
  • Discussion forums
  • Webchats, texting, e-mailing responses,
    ePetitions, Interactive voting, opinion meters
    etc.

4
Online deliberation
  • The internet allows for an opportunity to
    scale-up - to involve large numbers without the
    costs of physically bringing people together
  • It is often claimed to promote honesty,
    directness in political exchanges and contact
    with people from different backgrounds which is
    appropriate for deliberation exercise (See
    Dahlberg 2001, Witschge 2004)
  • On the other hand, anonymous encounters online
    can exert normative group influence (Postmes,
    Spears, Lea, 1998)
  • In that case, it runs the risk that the online
    deliberation experience may be diluted or even
    counterproductive

5
Information only vs Deliberation
  • There is an ongoing debate in the literature on
    deliberative democracy as to whether it is
    information alone or information plus
    deliberation that has an effect on judgements
  • Goodin (2003) argues that internal reflection (or
    reflective deliberation) is enough interaction
    between citizen is not the important factor
  • Others from public opinion theory argue that
    exposure to disagreement (i.e. interaction with
    others) does indeed contribute to more
    deliberative opinion formation (Price, Cappella
    and Nir, 2002)

6
RCT on deliberation
  • Social scientist have evaluated deliberative
    forums to see if participants change their views,
    knowledge and opinions (Drysek 2002, Fishkin
    1997, Delli Carpini et al 2004, Price, Nir and
    Cappela 2006)
  • Few randomised control trials testing for the
    effect of deliberation (exceptions are Farrar et
    al 2003, Iyengar 2005)
  • Moreover, existing studies have been confined to
    small numbers mini publics of participants who
    are able to participate in a face-to-face
    deliberation.
  • No experiments testing the deliberative potential
    of online discussion forums

7
Research Questions
  • To what extent does online engagement amongst
    large numbers lead to shifts in policy
    preferences and knowledge?
  • To what extent can online engagement amongst
    large numbers be termed deliberative?
  • What is the value of citizens interaction
    compared to the provision of information alone?

8
The RCT design
  • 6,000 participants from Ipsos-MORI survey panel
    using random quota sampling.
  • Randomly allocated to 4 treatment and 2 control
    groups
  • 2 x deliberation groups
  • Goup 1 youth anti-social behaviour (ASB)
    followed by community cohesion (CC)
  • Group2 community cohesion (CC) followed by youth
    anti-social behaviour (ASB)
  • Access to discussion boards and background
    information
  • 2x information-only groups (video clips and
    documents)
  • 2 x control groups
  • All participants completed three surveys
  • T1 (before experiment), T2 (after first issue),
    T3 (after second issue)

9
CONSORT Flow Diagram
10
Hypotheses
  • H1 An internet deliberative forum has an impact
    on participants views, knowledge and opinions.
  • H2 Information alone has an impact on opinion
    change
  • H3 The order of the topic can make an impact on
    opinion change.
  • H4 The impact of deliberation is greater than
    information alone
  • H5 Deliberation results in more opinion shift in
    youth anti-social behaviour than in community
    cohesion

11
The initial findings
  • Just over 50 of the treatment groups took part
    in the online activities
  • Completion of survey was much higher
  • 77.5 who had anti-social behaviour topic
    completed T2 survey (73.2 of them completed
    community cohesion questionnaire in T3)
  • 76.5 who had community cohesion topic completed
    T2 survey
  • (71 of them completed anti-social behaviour
    questionnaire in T3)
  • No obvious large-scale shifts in opinions.
  • Many of the threads read like speak your brains
    rather than exchange of opinions and considered
    reflection.
  • There was lack of responsiveness

12
Further analysis
  • Application of propensity score matching of those
    who actually took part in online deliberation in
    the treated group with similar members of the
    control group for further analysis
  • Application of adapted Discourse Quality Index
    for qualitative analysis
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