Description
This book focuses on online petitioning and crowdfunding platforms to demonstrate the everyday impact that digital communications have had on contemporary citizen participation. In doing do, the book argues that crowdsourced participation has become normalised and institutionalised into the everyday repertoires of citizens and their organisations. Within the digitally-enabled shift in individual acts of participation, creating, signing and sharing online petitions and micro-donations have become a focal point because of the clear evolution from their offline and online counterparts.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Why do online crowds matter for contemporary citizen politics?.- Chapter 2: Who signs and shares petitions and donates money online?.- Chapter 3: How do political organisations use online petitioning and crowdfunding?.- Chapter 4: What kinds of issues do citizens successfully raise via online petitions?.- Chapter 5: Why do personal narratives and stories matter for online political engagement?.- Chapter 6: Does online citizen engagement matter for reinvigorating contemporary politics?



