Data-driven campaigning and democratic disruption: Evidence from six advanced democracies

Author:

Kefford Glenn1ORCID,Dommett Katharine2,Baldwin-Philippi Jessica3,Bannerman Sara4,Dobber Tom5,Kruschinski Simon6,Kruikemeier Sanne5,Rzepecki Erica4

Affiliation:

1. School of Political Science and International Studies, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia

2. Department of Politics, University of Sheffield, UK

3. Department of Communication and Media Studie, Fordham University, Bronx, NY, USA

4. Faculty of Social Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada

5. Amsterdam School of Communications Research, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands

6. Department of Communication, Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Germany

Abstract

Data-driven campaigning has become one of the key foci for academic and non-academic audiences interested in political communication. Widely seen to have transformed political practice, it is often argued that data-driven campaigning is a force of significant democratic disruption because it contributes to a fragmentation of political discourse, undermines prevailing systems of electoral accountability and subverts ‘free’ and ‘fair’ elections. In this article, we present one of the very first cross-national analyses of data-driven campaigning by political parties. Drawing on empirical research conducted by experts in six advanced democracies, we show that the data-driven campaign practices seen to threaten democracy are often not manifest in party campaigns. Instead, we see a set of practices that build on pre-existing techniques and which are far less sophisticated than is often assumed. Indeed, we present evidence that most political parties lack the capacity to execute the hyper-intensive practices often associated with data-driven campaigning. Hence, while there is reason to remain alert to the challenges data-driven campaigning produces for democratic norms, we argue that this practice is not inherently disruptive, but rather exemplifies the evolving nature of political campaigning in the 21st century.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

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