Summary notes from the Measuring Online Behaviour workshop held on 15 September 2009 are available here.
2009-11-26: Andrew Chadwick speaking at UCL's School of Public Policy
Professor Andrew Chadwick will be speaking at UCL's School of Public Policy on November 26, 2009 at 5pm. The location is the Council Room, School of Public Policy, UCL, 29/30 Tavistock Square, London WC1.
The title of his talk is "Theorizing the Internet and Democracy Now."
The jihadist style-journey: Germany’s election and after
A video-letter from a purported al-Qaida soldier calling on Germany to end its military involvement in Afghanistan has heightened security concerns in the country before and after the election. But it is Bekkay Harrach's "western" appearance as much as his message that deserves scrutiny, say Mina Al-Lami & Ben O'Loughlin.
Read today's article on openDemocracy here.
By Ben O'Loughlin.
Announcement: Strategic Narratives panels at the 2010 ISA Annual Convention
A strategic narrative is a narrative forged by a state with the express purpose of influencing the foreign policy behavior of other actors. This communicative work is particularly critical in periods of transition in the international system when challengers to hegemonic powers emerge, such as the challenge of China, India and the EU to the existing US-led world order. Over the past 12 months a research programme on strategic narratives has been initiated by the NPCU, Centre for European Politics at Royal Holloway, and Centre for Global Political Economy at the University of Sussex. This programme has been recognised by the International Studies Association, which will host two panels on the theme on Saturday 20 February 2010 at the ISA Annual Convention in New Orleans. The first panel presents recent studies of the strategic narrative work undertaken by major powers (and some non-state actors). The second brings together leading figures with experience of policy, media and academia for a roundtable discussion on the ‘battle for influence’ in international affairs.
Research Panel: Identity, Persuasion and Strategic Narratives (10.30am)
Papers:
- Laura Roselle: Communicating Strategic Narratives: Constructing the Post-Cold War International System
- Alister Miskimmon: The European Security Strategy as a Strategic Narrative: Projecting European Union influence?
- Karin Fierke: The Body as Strategic Narrative: Self Sacrifice and Power in International Relations
- Cristina Archetti: Constructing the Al-Qaida Narrative: Media and Communication in the Radicalization process
- Ben O'Loughlin: Media Diplomacy, Non-Linear Narratives and Digital Emergence
- Discussant: Andreas Antoniades, University of Sussex
Roundtable: The Battle for Influence: Great Powers in the 21st Century (3.45pm)
Participants:
- Parag Khanna, New America Foundation
- Philip Seib, University of Southern California
- Jeffrey Legro, University of Virginia
- Laura Roselle, Elon University
- Fabio Petito, University of Sussex
- Ben O'Loughlin, NPCU
- Alister Miskimmon, Royal Holloway, University of London
For further information please contact Ben.OLoughlin@rhul.ac.uk.
Tom Hanks on radicalisation

I watched Angels and Demons on a plane the other day, the follow up to the Da Vinci Code. Having been at workshops on radicalisation and de-radicalisation all last week, I was surprised to hear the word 'radicalized' spoken by Tom Hanks' character, Langdon. He was explaining to a Catholic official, Richter, how a Catholic purge centuries ago radicalised pro-science enlightenment types called the Illuminati, who have now come back to blow up the Vatican using anti-matter they stole from the Cern large hadron collidor (the ultimate dirty bomb):
Richter: You said they'd be killed publicly.
Robert Langdon: Yes, revenge. For La Purga.
Richter: La Purga?
Robert Langdon: Oh geez, you guys dont even read your own history do
you? 1668, the church kidnapped four Illuminati scientists and
branded each one of them on the chest with the symbol of the cross.
To purge them of their sins and they executed them, threw their
bodies in the street as a warning to others to stop questioning
church ruling on scientific matters. They radicalized them. The
Purga created a darker, more violent Illuminati, one bent on... on
retribution.
Is 'radicalized' now a taken-for-granted word? That would be something, given that social scientists and security agencies still have little idea how any such radicalisation process might work, in 1668 or today.
By Ben O'Loughlin.
Even radical Muslims rely on bearded stereotypes and BBC to understand Jihadists
Webmetrics final programme available
The final programme for the NPCU Webmetrics workshop on Monday 15 September is available here.
Free issue of web 2.0 special of JITP, only during APSA 2009: http://shrinkify.com/144k
FREE ISSUE ONLINE ONLY DURING APSA 2009
Journal of Information Technology & Politics Volume 6, Issue 3 & 4
(2009)
Special Issue: “Politics: Web 2.0” Visit: http://shrinkify.com/144k
Offer is good September 2-6, 2009, please visit http://www.jitp.net
JOIN the Information Technology & Politics Section of the APSA DURING APSA
2009 and you will be entered in a drawing for an iPod
• Visit: http://www.apsanet.org/member/index.cfm
• Join: http://www.apsanet.org/content_5062.cfm
• All new and renewing members will be entered
JOIN the JITP reviewer database DURING APSA 2009 be entered in a drawing for
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political action
FREE ISSUE ONLINE ONLY DURING APSA 2009
The Journal of Information Technology & Politics Volume 6, Issue 3 & 4
(2009). Special Issue: “Politics: Web 2.0.”
Guest Editor’s Introduction
“The Internet and Politics in Flux”
Andrew Chadwick
Research Papers
“Realizing the Social Internet? Online Social Networking Meets Offline Civic
Engagement”
- Josh Pasek; eian more; Daniel Romer
“Typing Together? Clustering of Ideological Types in Online Social Networks”
- Brian J. Gaines; Jeffery J. Mondak
“Building an Architecture of Participation? Political Parties and Web 2.0 in
Britain”
- Nigel A. Jackson; Darren G. Lilleker
“Norwegian Parties and Web 2.0”
- Øyvind Kalnes
“The Labors of Internet-Assisted Activism: Overcommunication,
Miscommunication, and Communicative Overload”
- Rasmus Kleis Nielsen
“Developing the “Good Citizen”: Digital Artifacts, Peer Networks, and Formal
Organization During the 2003–2004 Howard Dean Campaign”
- Daniel Kreiss
“Lost in Technology? Political Parties and the Online Campaigns of
Constituency Candidates in Germany’s Mixed Member Electoral System”
- Thomas Zittel
“Internet Election 2.0? Culture, Institutions, and Technology in the Korean
Presidential Elections of 2002 and 2007”
- Yeon-Ok Lee
“The Internet and Mobile Technologies in Election Campaigns: The GABRIELA
Women’s Party During the 2007 Philippine Elections”
- Kavita Karan; Jacques D. M. Gimeno; Edson Tandoc Jr.
Call for papers
The Inaugural Interdisciplinary Conference of the Virtual Communication, Collaboration and Conflict (VIRT3C) Research Group at the University of Hull
VIRT3C@Hull 2010 Developing the Virtual Society: Conflict in Adoption of Collaborative Networks
19-20 March
Geert Lovink [Institute for Network Cultures, Hogeschool Van Amsterdam and University of Amsterdam]
Gabriella Coleman [Media, Culture, and Communication, NYU]
Mathieu O’Neil [Paris Sorbonne – Paris IV]
Our plenary theme is ‘Developing the Virtual Society: Conflict in Adoption of Online Collaborative Networks’. As virtual society develops, and peer technologies and practices pump in its heart, this conference brings together academics of all disciplines to discuss conflict in the adoption of collaborative networks. This is a time of confrontation between older forms of communication and organization and new ways of sharing, collaborating and acting collectively. We seek to explore conflicts emerging in the transition from, and resistance to, horizontal participatory networks, as well as conflict within collaborative networks. We welcome suggestions for panels and papers on any area relating to our theme, and particularly in the following areas:
• Network Theory
• P2P and FLOSS methodology adoption
• FLOSS methodology
• Open source conflicts and forking
• Adoption by NGOs and the developing world
• Adoption by social movements, hacktivism, cyberconflict
• Institutional resistance to networks
• Online P2P places and conflicts
We encourage especially contributions, including, but not limited to, politics, economics, computer science, business, psychology, sociology, and law.
With your abstract of no more than 300 words please include the following information:
Name, postal address, email
Institutional affiliation and position (if applicable)
Please send abstracts in Word or pdf format to the organisers at
athina.k@gmail.com
Provisional Deadline for abstracts: 15th January 2010
Network Security project award
The NPCU can announce a new £130,784 research grant award to Dr Ben O’Loughlin in collaboration with Linguamatics Ltd. The award, from the Technology Strategy Board (http://www.innovateuk.org/), will fund a 12-month pilot investigation of the use of blogs and twitter as a way of monitoring information infrastructures for early warnings of problems. Linguamatics are a text-mining company based in Cambridge, UK. Lawrence Ampofo, a PhD student in the department, will be a Research Assistant on the project.
Automatic analysis of formal channels (e.g. customer surveys and user feedback forms) using Natural Language Processing (NLP) has been successfully used by large organisations to identify issues reported with products and services. Informal online sources of information, such as blogs and twitter, give the potential for greater coverage of issues in near-real time. We will take NLP technology already proven in life science research and apply it to blogs and twitter for monitoring of digital services. Weak signals gathered from large numbers of users can suggest problems which do not show up as single point failures. We will also see if it is possible to catch cases where a rumour of a problem may exacerbate or even cause the problem itself.
