IFIP TC6 Open Digital Library

3. ePart 2011: Delft, The Netherlands

Electronic Participation - Third IFIP WG 8.5 International Conference, ePart 2011, Delft, The Netherlands, August 29 - September 1, 2011. Proceedings

Efthimios Tambouris, Ann Macintosh, Hans de Bruijn

Springer, Lecture Notes in Computer Science 6847, ISBN: 978-3-642-23332-6



Contents

Appreciation of Social Media

Understanding TwitterTM Use among Parliament Representatives: A Genre Analysis.

Øystein Sæbø

 1-12

Left and Right in the Blogosphere: Ideological Differences in Online Campaigning.

Joachim Åström, Martin Karlsson

 13-24

Social Media and Political Participation: Are Facebook, Twitter and YouTube Democratizing Our Political Systems?

Robin Effing, Jos van Hillegersberg, Theo W. C. Huibers

 25-35

Combining Social and Government Open Data for Participatory Decision-Making.

Evangelos Kalampokis, Michael Hausenblas, Konstantinos A. Tarabanis

 36-47

Extracting Semantic Knowledge from Twitter.

Peter Teufl, Stefan Kraxberger

 48-59

Visualising Arguments

Argument Visualization for eParticipation: Towards a Research Agenda and Prototype Tool.

Neil Benn, Ann Macintosh

 60-73

Evaluation of an Argument Visualisation Platform by Experts and Policy Makers.

Efthimios Tambouris, Efpraxia Dalakiouridou, Eleni Panopoulou, Konstantinos A. Tarabanis

 74-86

ArgVis: Structuring Political Deliberations Using Innovative Visualisation Technologies.

Areti Karamanou, Nikolaos Loutas, Konstantinos A. Tarabanis

 87-98

Understanding eParticipation

eParticipation Research: A Longitudinal Overview.

Rony Medaglia

 99-108

Power and Participation in Digital Late Modernity: Towards a Network Logic.

Jakob Svensson

 109-120

Inform-Consult-Empower: A Three-Tiered Approach to eParticipation.

Deirdre Lee, Nikolaos Loutas, Elena Sánchez-Nielsen, Esen Mogulkoc, Oli Lacigova

 121-132

Design Thinking and Participation: Lessons Learned from Three Case Studies.

Olivier Glassey, Jean-Henry Morin, Patrick Genoud, Giorgio Pauletto

 133-144

Reference Framework for E-participation Projects.

Sabrina Scherer, Maria Wimmer

 145-156

eParticipation Initiatives and Country Studies

Measure to Improve: A Study of eParticipation in Frontrunner Dutch Municipalities.

Anne Fleur van Veenstra, Marijn Janssen, Andreas Boon

 157-168

Direct Democracy Catalysed by Resident-to-Resident Online Deliberation.

Rean van der Merwe, Anthony Meehan

 169-179

Knowledge as Power on the Internet.

Zelinna Pablo, Cynthia Hardy

 180-191

Revisiting the Conceptualisation of e-Campaigning: Putting Campaign Back in e-Campaigning Research.

Hugo Gong, Miriam Lips, Mary Tate

 192-203

An Overview Assessment of ePetitioning Tools in the English Local Government.

Panagiotis Panagiotopoulos, Christopher Moody, Tony Elliman

 204-215

Questão Pública: First Voting Advice Application in Latin America.

Alejandra Marzuca, Uwe Serdült, Yanina Welp

 216-227

iLeger: A Web Based Application for Participative Elections.

Artur Afonso Sousa, Pedro Agante, Luis Borges Gouveia

 228-239

Participation and eServices

One for All, All for One - Performing Citizen Driven Development of Public E-Services.

Katarina Lindblad-Gidlund

 240-251

Talking about Public Service Processes.

Bruna Diirr, Renata Mendes de Araujo, Claudia Cappelli

 252-261

Innovation and Evolution of Services: Role of Initiatives.

Anastasiya Yurchyshyna, Abdelaziz Khadraoui, Wanda Opprecht, Michel Léonard

 262-273

Innovative Technologies

Citizen Engagement with Information Aggregation Markets.

Efthimios Bothos, Dimitris Apostolou, Gregoris Mentzas

 274-285

Towards a Structured Online Consultation Tool.

Adam Zachary Wyner, Katie Atkinson, Trevor J. M. Bench-Capon

 286-297

A Review of Opinion Mining Methods for Analyzing Citizens' Contributions in Public Policy Debate.

Manolis Maragoudakis, Euripidis Loukis, Yannis Charalabidis

 298-313