Dr Colin Smith Cf.Smith@napier.ac.uk
Associate Professor
The emergent ICT culture of Parliamentarians
Smith, Colin F; Webster, William
Authors
William Webster
Abstract
Technologies such as the web and email have been seen to offer new capabilities through which traditional representative arrangements can be reinvigorated and renewed. This paper explores the ways in which information and communications technologies (ICTs) have become embedded within the cultural norms and activities of parliamentarians, by examining the experience of Members of the Scottish Parliament (MSPs). At the heart of the paper is a discussion of new research data which provides empirical evidence of a significant technological orientation, and an emergent ICT culture that is the outcome of the intertwined relationship between the adoption and use of new communications technologies by parliamentarians, and the established norms and procedures of parliamentary activity.
Although there is a body of work which explores the development of the web for parliamentarians and parliaments, this paper avoids the limitations of methodologies based upon an analysis of the characteristics of websites in favour of a grounded approach, focusing on actual uptake and use of a wide range of communications technologies by MSPs, as reported in survey findings. Utilising longitudinal empirical data, the paper sets out to establish how new communications technologies have been approached by MSPs. It explores the extent to which they regard ICTs as having utility for a wide range of their functions as parliamentarians, party actors and representatives, and demonstrates the extent to which new technologies underpin key communications relationships with other actors in the polity. In so doing, it seeks to illustrate that ICTs, rather that having a deterministic ‘impact’ on practice, have been utilised in specific ways reflecting both parliamentary ‘norms’ and an appreciation of the distinctive capabilities that they offer. As such, it is evident that there is an emergent ICT culture which is expressed in the working lives and activities of Scottish parliamentarians. Data on uptake and use is further contextualised through an exploration of MSPs’ attitudes towards the democratic potential of ICTs, providing further evidence of the emerging technological orientation amongst Scottish parliamentarians.
Citation
Smith, C. F., & Webster, W. (2007, September). The emergent ICT culture of Parliamentarians. Paper presented at XXIth meeting of the Permanent Study Group on E-Government (Information and Communications Technologies in Public Administration), European Group of Public Administration Annual Conference
Presentation Conference Type | Conference Paper (unpublished) |
---|---|
Conference Name | XXIth meeting of the Permanent Study Group on E-Government (Information and Communications Technologies in Public Administration), European Group of Public Administration Annual Conference |
Start Date | Sep 19, 2007 |
End Date | Sep 22, 2007 |
Publication Date | 2007-09 |
Deposit Date | Feb 16, 2010 |
Publicly Available Date | Feb 16, 2010 |
Peer Reviewed | Not Peer Reviewed |
Pages | 1-40 |
Keywords | ICT; Members of Scottish Parliament; new technologies; norms; |
Public URL | http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/id/eprint/3446 |
Contract Date | Feb 16, 2010 |
Files
Smith_and_Webster_EGPA_07_Paper[1].pdf
(728 Kb)
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Publisher Licence URL
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
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