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|a 9781137378354 (electronic bk.)
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|a 1137378352 (electronic bk.)
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|z 9781137380845 (alk. paper)
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|z 1137380845 (alk. paper)
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|z 9781137380852 (alk. paper)
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|z 1137380853 (alk. paper)
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|b .K38 2013
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|a 973.932092
|2 23
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|a Katz, James Everett,
|e author.
|0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n81139663
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|a The social media president :
|b Barack Obama and the politics of digital engagement /
|c James E. Katz, Michael Barris, and Anshul Jain.
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|a Barack Obama and the politics of digital engagement
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|a Social media president
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|a First edition.
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|a New York, NY :
|b Palgrave Macmillan,
|c 2013.
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300 |
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|a 1 online resource (x, 215 pages.)
|
336 |
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|a text
|b txt
|2 rdacontent
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|a computer
|b c
|2 rdamedia
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|a online resource
|b cr
|2 rdacarrier
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|a Includes bibliographical references and index.
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505 |
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|a Machine generated contents note:
|g pt. I
|t Framing the Issue --
|g 1.
|t Introduction and Overview --
|t "Let Them Determine Its Course" --
|t Promise and Its Appeal --
|t Models of American Government --
|t Lines of Inquiry --
|t Outline of the Book --
|g 2.
|t Situating Social Media and Citizen Participation in the Obama Era --
|t Definitions: Digital Engagement, Social Media, and the Social Media President --
|t From One-way to Multi-way Communication: A Gateway to Becoming a Social Media President --
|t Structures of Usage of the Public's Voice in White House Social Media Exercises --
|t Three Modalities of Social Media Interaction between Government and Citizens --
|t Topical Focus and Case Study Selection --
|g 3.
|t Digital Media and Electoral Politics: An Abbreviated History --
|t Elections and Governance as Digital Media Emerges --
|t Digital Media and the Presidency: The Challenge of Governance --
|g pt. II
|t Obama Presidency --
|g 4.
|t Framing the "People's White House": Crowdsourcing and the Citizen's Briefing Book --
|t Expectations of Changing the Way Washington Works --
|t Crowdsourcing in the Obama Administration Agenda: The Citizen's Briefing Book --
|t Results of the Exercise --
|t Impact of Report --
|t Conclusion --
|g 5.
|t White House Online Town Hall --
|t Seeking to Engage the American Public via Social Media --
|t Critics Evaluate the Online Town Hall --
|t Questions of Control and Predictability in Open Forums --
|t Pattern Continues --
|t Ideologies of Engagement and Nonengagement --
|t Conclusion --
|g 6.
|t Grand Challenges: Crowdsourcing a Vision for Science and Technology --
|t "Fully Open Government" Grand Challenge --
|t New Crowdsourcing Tool --
|t Disconnection between Crowdsourcing and Policy Innovations --
|t Conclusion --
|g 7.
|t Supreme Court Vacancies and the Healthcare Debate --
|t Supreme Court Vacancies: Why Was Social Media Voting Not Used? --
|t Social Media to Combat Opposition to Healthcare --
|t Assessments of Healthcare Initiatives and Social Media --
|t Conclusion --
|g 8.
|t Social Media Modalities: Examples and Patterns from the Obama White House --
|t Three Modalities of Social Media for Government Policy --
|t "We the People" Campaign --
|t Other Efforts to Gain Engagement --
|t Free Moral Labor: Engaged Citizens as Propagators of Presidential Viewpoints --
|t Conclusion --
|g 9.
|t Propagation of Social Media Modalities in the Federal Government --
|t Resonance and Limits within the Administration --
|t Implementation and Bureaucracy: Putting the Federal Data Sharing/Transparency Directive into Action --
|t Broader Operational Goals and Transparency --
|t Progress in the Early Obama Administration --
|t Interbranch Realities: A Changed Landscape --
|t Democracy Watchdogs Review President Obama's Early Social Media Strategy --
|t Assessment of Progress in the Early Years across the Three Modalities --
|t Recent Progress --
|t Glass Suggestion Boxes, Domestic and International --
|t Conclusion --
|g pt. III
|t Perspectives and Outlook on the Social Media President --
|g 10.
|t Analytical Perspectives --
|t Sincere Motivations in a Constrained Landscape --
|t Operational Shortcomings --
|t Strategic Manipulation --
|t Nonfeasibility of Direct Mass Engagement --
|t Absence of Design --
|t Additional Considerations --
|t Top-Down Leadership and Pronouncements about Social Media --
|t Social Media and Citizen Imagination: Bringing the President Close --
|t Sustaining the Engagement --
|t Conclusion: The Road Not Taken --
|g 11.
|t Conclusions and Implications --
|t Broader Patterns of Social Media Realities --
|t Digital Divide and Fundamental Inequalities of Digital Engagement --
|t Strengthening Bureaucracies in Surprising Ways --
|t Blowback of Disappointed Supporters --
|t Misplaced Faith in the Wisdom of the People, as Reflected in Plebiscites and Low-Interest Issues --
|t Social Media Models of Behavior: "Economic Actor" Vis-a-vis "Technocratic Citizen" --
|t Civic Culture and Empowerment --
|t Covert Activities and Hidden Consequences --
|t Is There a Future for Presidential Social Media? --
|t Closing Remarks --
|t Implications for Future Directions --
|t Perils of Social Media Steering --
|t Appendix: Scholarship of Digital Media and the American Political Landscape --
|t Democratizing Potential of Information and Communication Technologies --
|t Practical Limitations to Deliberative Democracy --
|t Political Communication Scholarship --
|t Presidential Scholarship --
|t Media and Public Opinion Scholarship --
|t Civic Engagement Scholarship --
|t Digital Media and Transparency --
|t Tapping the Organizing Power of Social Media.
|
533 |
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|a Electronic reproduction.
|b Ann Arbor, MI
|n Available via World Wide Web.
|
588 |
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|a Description based on print version record.
|
600 |
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|a Obama, Barack.
|0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n94112934
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|0 (OCoLC)fst00348231
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650 |
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|a Presidents
|z United States.
|0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85106465
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|a Communication in politics
|x Technological innovations
|z United States.
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|a Internet
|x Political aspects
|z United States.
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|a Social media
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|a Barris, Michael,
|e author.
|0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2014041880
|
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|a Jain, Anshul
|c (Political scientist),
|e author.
|0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2014070482
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