Publication | Closed Access
The Internet and Campaign Finance in the U.S. and the UK: An Institutional Comparison
49
Citations
24
References
2008
Year
New TechnologyE-participationPublic OpinionCampaign FinancePolitical BehaviorDigital DivideOnline FundraisingSocial SciencesCampaign Finance StrategiesFintechPolitical CommunicationDigital EconomyPublic PolicyE-democracyDigital FinanceComparative PoliticsInstitutional ComparisonGovernment CommunicationPolitical CompetitionFinancePublic FinanceInformation EconomicsPolitical AgendaBusinessE-financingPolitical Science
ABSTRACT While much literature on the Internet has drawn heavily on the ideas of normalization or optimism, this article seeks to define a more complex relationship between existing political institutions and new technology. With reference to the development of campaign finance strategies in the U.S. and the UK, it will aim to show that existing political circumstances and technology share a dialectic relationship when it comes to generating outcomes. The success of online fundraising in the U.S. is certainly reforming political life, but it is the product of longstanding arrangements and beliefs that have catalyzed its impact. In contrast in the United Kingdom, institutional arrangements have retarded the potential of the Web in this area.
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