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Original Articles

Is Web 2.0 Providing a Voice for Outsiders? A Comparison of Personal Web Site and Social Media Use by Candidates at the 2010 UK General Election

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Gunther Vanden Eynde & Bart Maddens. (2022) Explaining digital campaign expenses: The case of the 2018 legislative elections in Colombia. Journal of Information Technology & Politics 19:3, pages 302-315.
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Temitayo Isaac Odeyemi & Omomayowa Olawale Abati. (2021) When disconnected institutions serve connected publics: subnational legislatures and digital public engagement in Nigeria. The Journal of Legislative Studies 27:3, pages 357-380.
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Yohanna Sällberg & Martin Ejnar Hansen. (2020) Analysing the Importance of Localness for MP Campaigning and Legislative Performance. Representation 56:2, pages 215-227.
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Rosalynd Southern & Benjamin J. Lee. (2019) Politics as usual? Assessing the extent and content of candidate-level online campaigning at the 2015 UK general election. Journal of Elections, Public Opinion and Parties 29:2, pages 179-198.
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Mehmet Zahid Sobaci. (2018) Inter-party competition on Facebook in a non-election period in Turkey: equalization or normalization?. Southeast European and Black Sea Studies 18:4, pages 573-591.
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Linn A. C Sandberg & Patrik Öhberg. (2017) The role of gender in online campaigning: Swedish candidates’ motives and use of social media during the European election 2014. Journal of Information Technology & Politics 14:4, pages 314-333.
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Articles from other publishers (18)

Gunther Vanden Eynde, Gert-Jan Put & Bart Maddens. (2022) The coming of age for paid digital campaigning: equalization or normalization in the 2019 Belgian federal elections?. Online Information Review 47:4, pages 749-764.
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Gunther Vanden Eynde & Bart Maddens. (2023) Does Digital Campaigning Make a Difference for Individual Candidates in an Open List Proportional Representation System? The Case of the 2019 Election in Belgium. Political Studies, pages 003232172311791.
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Michael Haman. (2023) Political communication on social media in Latin America: unequal use of Twitter by members of parliament. El Profesional de la información.
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Patrícia Rossini, Rosalynd Southern, Emily Harmer & Jennifer Stromer-Galley. (2023) Unleash Britain’s Potential (To Go Negative): Campaign Negativity in the 2017 and 2019 UK General Elections on Facebook. Political Studies Review, pages 147892992311713.
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Cheonsoo Kim. (2023) Social media in the election during the COVID‐19 pandemic in South Korea: Candidates’ use of social media when offline gatherings are prohibited. Social Science Quarterly 104:3, pages 214-229.
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Michael Haman. (2023) Why Do Political Candidates Use Social Media in Election Campaigning? An Explanation Offered by a Cost-Benefit Calculation Using Survey Data. Political Studies Review, pages 147892992311521.
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Azi Lev-On. (2023) A big-data analysis of the communication patterns of parliament members with the public on Facebook: top-down, non-inclusive and non-egalitarian. SSRN Electronic Journal.
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Azi Lev-On. (2023) Normalizing or equalizing? Characterizing Facebook campaigning. SSRN Electronic Journal.
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Temitayo Isaac Odeyemi, Gideon Uchechukwu Igwebueze, Omomayowa Olawale Abati & Adeola Opeyemi Ogundotun. (2021) Political hibernation in‐between elections? Exploring the online communication and mobilisation capacities of Nigeria's political parties. Journal of Public Affairs 22:S1.
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Nili Steinfeld & Azi Lev-On. (2022) A big-data analysis of the communication patterns of parliament members with the public on Facebook: top-down, non-inclusive and non-egalitarian. Aslib Journal of Information Management.
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Márton Bene. (2021) Who reaps the benefits? A cross-country investigation of the absolute and relative normalization and equalization theses in the 2019 European Parliament elections. New Media & Society, pages 146144482110196.
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Liam McLoughlin & Rosalynd Southern. (2020) By any memes necessary? Small political acts, incidental exposure and memes during the 2017 UK general election. The British Journal of Politics and International Relations 23:1, pages 60-84.
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Lucas Böttcher & Hans Gersbach. (2020) The great divide: drivers of polarization in the US public. EPJ Data Science 9:1.
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Liam McLoughlin, Stephen Ward, Rachel Gibson & Rosalynd Southern. (2020) A tale of three tribes: UK MPs, Twitter and the EU Referendum campaign1. Information Polity 25:1, pages 49-66.
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Azi Lev-On & Sharon Haleva-Amir. (2016) Normalizing or equalizing? Characterizing Facebook campaigning. New Media & Society 20:2, pages 720-739.
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Amalia Triantafillidou, Georgios Lappas, Alexandros Kleftodimos & Prodromos Yannas. 2018. Sub-National Democracy and Politics Through Social Media. Sub-National Democracy and Politics Through Social Media 65 89 .
Simon Usherwood & Katharine AM Wright. (2017) Sticks and stones: Comparing Twitter campaigning strategies in the European Union referendum. The British Journal of Politics and International Relations 19:2, pages 371-388.
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Sharon Haleva-Amir. (2021) Cross-Platform Analysis of PLCs’ (Parties, Leaders, Candidates) Social Media Presence in Israel’s 2015 Electoral Campaign. SSRN Electronic Journal.
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