DocumentCode
2549502
Title
Knowledge production and political participation: Reconsidering the knowledge gap theory in the Web 2.0 environment
Author
Wei, Lu ; Yan, Yanrong
Author_Institution
Coll. of Media & Int. Culture, Zhejiang Univ., Hangzhou, China
fYear
2010
fDate
16-18 April 2010
Firstpage
239
Lastpage
243
Abstract
The rise of user-generated content on the Internet calls people´s attention to individual´s production of political knowledge. This study attempts to shift the research agenda from knowledge possession in the classic knowledge gap theory to knowledge production, which is arguably a more important step toward the building of democratic and participatory public sphere. Findings from a national survey reveal that there are gaps in the production of political knowledge among different social groups. The patterns, however, vary between different forms of knowledge production. Demographics, political ideologies, and the frequency of political talk and general Internet use all correlate to different forms of knowledge production in different ways. In the meantime, knowledge production, particularly in the forms of posting comments and pictures, has a significant and positive relationship with political participation. While replicating portions of the structural inequalities offline, online knowledge production presents some new opportunities to shrink the knowledge gap between different social strata.
Keywords
Internet; social networking (online); socio-economic effects; Internet; Web 2.0 environment; knowledge gap theory; political knowledge production; political participation; socioeconomic status; Demography; Educational institutions; Educational technology; Electronic mail; Frequency; Information services; Internet; Production; User-generated content; Web sites; Internet; Web 2.0; knowledge gap; knowledge production; political participation;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Information Management and Engineering (ICIME), 2010 The 2nd IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Chengdu
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-5263-7
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4244-5265-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICIME.2010.5477878
Filename
5477878
Link To Document