Abstract
Results of a survey of student bloggers in the former Soviet Bloc nation of Kyrgyzstan (N = 132) showed that their offline political engagement had a positive relationship with their online political voice. Specifically, those bloggers who attended political meetings or had contacted a politician or civil servant offline were more likely to express their political thoughts on their blog. Results also showed that those who paid the most attention to political and public affairs reports in newspapers, blogged more frequently, and those who blogged more frequently, exhibited greater expression of political voice through their blogs. In addition, media attentiveness showed an indirect effect on online political voice, mediated through blogging frequency. Results are discussed in relation to social capital theory and implications for political expression in this country where speaking out remains constrained are explored.
Acknowledgements
This research was part of the first author’s doctoral dissertation. The first author thanks his advisor, Dr. Mary L. Sheffer, and his committee members, Dr. Fei Xue, Dr. Vanessa D. Murphree, Dr. Ann M. Kinnell, and Dr. James T. Johnson, for their valuable suggestions on an earlier version of this work.
Note
Notes
1 Dr. Bermet Tursunkulova was the Deputy Minister of Education of Kyrgyz Republic. She has now moved to another position