The Technological Development of Congressional Candidate Web Sites
- 1 November 2007
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Social Science Computer Review
- Vol. 25 (4) , 425-442
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0894439307305623
Abstract
The Internet offers political candidates a new way to campaign. Part of the Internet's novelty comes from technological options not available in most other media. Candidates, however, must weigh various benefits and costs in using a given technological innovation. For example, technology that allows for increased user interactivity may lead to a more stimulating web site but might distract users from the campaign's central message. In this article, the authors use data from 444 congressional campaign web sites, over two elections, to examine how candidates approach web technology. They investigate the factors that lead candidates to utilize or avoid particular technological features. They show that technological adoption is determined by both practical and strategic political considerations. Of particular interest, the competitiveness of a candidate's race leads the candidate to use more sophisticated presentation technologies but less advanced interactive innovations because these latter options interfere with the candidate's message.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Campaign Politics and the Digital DividePolitical Research Quarterly, 2007
- Views from Inside the Net: How Websites Affect Young Adults' Political InterestThe Journal of Politics, 2005
- Interactivity in Society: Locating an Elusive ConceptThe Information Society, 2004
- A Pitfall of New Media? User Controls Exacerbate Editing Effects on MemoryJournalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 2004
- The Power of Television Images: The First Kennedy-Nixon Debate RevisitedThe Journal of Politics, 2003
- An Investigation of Elaboration and Selective Scanning as Mediators of Learning From the Web Versus PrintJournal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 2002
- Online Structure for Political Action: Exploring Presidential Campaign Web Sites from the 2000 American ElectionJavnost - The Public, 2002
- The Web and U.S. Senatorial Campaigns 2000American Behavioral Scientist, 2001
- Processing PoliticsPublished by University of Chicago Press ,2001
- The Illusion of Intimacy Television and the Role of Candidate Personal Qualities in Voter ChoicePublic Opinion Quarterly, 1987