Sorry for cross-posting

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Now Published:
‘Online Collective Action and Policy Change’  - Special Issue of “Policy and 
Internet"

Guest Editors:
Andrea Calderaro (European University Institute) and Anastasia Kavada 
(University of Westminster)

Abstract
The Internet has multiplied the platforms available to influence public opinion 
and policy making. It has also provided citizens with a greater capacity for 
coordination and mobilisation, which can strengthen their voice and 
representation in the policy agenda. As waves of protest sweep both 
authoritarian regimes and liberal democracies, this rapidly developing field 
calls for more detailed enquiry. However, research exploring the relationship 
between online mobilisation and policy change is still limited. This special 
issue of ‘Policy and Internet’ addresses this gap through a variety of 
perspectives. Contributions to this issue view the Internet both as a tool that 
allows citizens to influence policy making, and as an object of new policies 
and regulations, such as data retention, privacy, and copyright laws, around 
which citizens are mobilising. Together, these articles offer a comprehensive 
empirical account of the interface between online collective action and policy 
making.

You can find the issue here: 
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/poi3.v5.1/issuetoc
and more information about it on the OII Policy & Internet blog:

- Introducing its contents: http://blogs.oii.ox.ac.uk/policy/?p=854
- Framing the issue : 
http://blogs.oii.ox.ac.uk/policy/?p=869<http://blogs.oii.ox.ac.uk/policy/?p=869#more-869>

Table of Contents

1. Editorial: “Challenges and Opportunities of Online Collective Action for 
Policy Change”
Andrea Calderaro and Anastasia Kavada

2. Networked Collective Action and the Institutionalized Policy Debate: 
Bringing Cyberactivism to the Policy Arena?
Stefania Milan and Arne Hintz

3. Digital Protest Skills and Online Activism Against Copyright Reform in 
France and the European Union
Yana Breindl and François Briatte

4. Activism and the Online Mediation Opportunity Structure: Attempts to Impact 
Global Climate Change Policies?
Julie Uldam

5. Online Campaigning Organizations and Storytelling Strategies: GetUp! in 
Australia
Ariadne Vromen and William Coleman

6. Hyperlinks as Political Resources: The European Commission Confronted with 
Online Activism
Romain Badouard and Laurence Monnoyer-Smith

7. The Domestication of Open Government Data Advocacy in the United Kingdom: A 
Neo-Gramscian Analysis
Jo Bates



-----------------------------------------------
Andrea Calderaro, PhD | European University Institute

Center for Media Pluralism and Media Freedom | European University Institute
Chair "Internet and Politics" Standing Group - European Consortium of Political 
Research (ECPR)

NEWS:  Guest Editor "Policy and Internet" special issue: "Online Collective 
Action and Policy Change": http://bit.ly/XpQGSy
-----------------------------------------------
Personal Page: 
www.eui.eu/Personal/Researchers/calderaro/<http://www.eui.eu/Personal/Researchers/calderaro/>
Twitter: @andreacalderaro


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