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A-LIST FILIPINO
 POLITICAL BLOGGERS
 AND THEIR READERS:
WHO THEY ARE, WHY THEY ACCESS BLOGS,
& HOW THEY PERCEIVE, & PARTICIPATE IN,
              POLITICS*
                  Mary Grace Mirandilla-Santos
                                  SIRCA Grantee
  26 February 2011, National College of Public Administration and Governance (NCPAG),
              University of the Philippines, Diliman, Quezon City, Philippines
*   This work was carried out with the aid of a SIRCA (Strengthening ICTD Research Capacity in Asia) grant from
    the International Development Research Centre (IDRC), Ottawa, Canada, and administrative support from
    the Singapore Internet Research Centre (SiRC), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. The project was
    managed under the Centre for Research and Communication in Manila, Philippines.
Internet, Blogging, and Politics
 PUBLIC SPHERE           INTERNET has changed the nature of
                      political communication and the landscape
  ELECTRONIC
                                 of political participation
   REPUBLIC

       User-friendly                          Personalized
          Low-cost                             Social

      BLOGS promising democratic tool for providing information,
facilitating political communication, and influencing nature and level of
                           political participation.

But, only anecdotal evidence on Filipino bloggers, how they affect
     their readers, and how both engage in political activities.
Curious Connections
• Blogs are founded on bloggers’ motivation and
  personal contexts: predisposition, resources, self-
  interests, and environment
• Political participation – based on actor’s intention to
  influence distribution of social goods and social
  values and government action
• Actors’ motivations and resources are important
  factors in understanding:
     (i) blogs as a form of political participation
     (ii) how blogs are used to promote participation
     (iii) potential of blogs in enhancing participation
What we wanted to find out
• A-list Filipino political bloggers
      Who they are
       Why they write political blogs
       Whether and how they participate in politics
       Whether and how they encourage readers to participate,
       online and offline

• Political blog readers
       Who they are
       Why they read political blogs
       What their attitude is toward politics
       Whether and how they participate in politics, online and
       offline
How we did it
• Online Survey
      30 A-list Filipino political bloggers (June to Oct 2009)
          (McKenna & Pole, 2004 and Ekdale et al. ,2007)
      64 political blog readers (Feb to May 2009)
          (McKenna & Pole, 2004 and Gorospe-Jamon, 1998)

• Elite interviews
      Political bloggers                    Academics
      Journalists                           Communications experts

• Focus group discussions (FGDs)
      Metro Manila (20 Feb 2010)
      Cebu City (22 May 2010)
      Davao City (29 May 2010)
Some notes on Sampling
• No consensus on how to define a political blog
      Searchability in Google and Yahoo! using key search terms:
       “Philippine” “political” “politics” “blog”
      Extract individual blogs from blog directories, ranking sites

• Selection criteria
      word “politics” in blog description or tags;
      author is a private individual, Filipino citizen, 18 years old or up;
      blog at least 1 year, with recent posts (from March to May 2009)
       about politics, average of 2 posts per month
      contact detail available (or active comment feature)

• A-list Filipino bloggers are established and popular
      Independent ranking undertaken using http://popuri.us and
       http://pagerankall.com
WHO are A-List Filipino Political Bloggers?

         Male, 25-34 y/o, Metro Manila-based; college-
         educated, employed, high-income; veteran
         internet users; broadband at home & work


Blogging for 2-4 years, 1-2 hrs/day, 3-5 days/week;
All blogs allow comments, almost all have links to
other political blogs; Read 10+ other blogs


    Feel that blogging is “a form of political participation”
    that has led to “an exchange of ideas among
    individuals even in the real world.”
WHY did they START to blog?
         KEEP TRACK OF
           THOUGHTS
                       top 2 box rating
                       (Very much + much)
                        INFORM PEOPLE ON
    63                 MOST RELEVANT INFO
               53          53           INFORM PEOPLE ON
                                      47MOST RECENT INFO
                                            47

                                                              40
                                                                         37        HELP
                                                                                     37

                                                                                  SOCIETY
                                                                                                  27


                                                                                                   FORMULATE
                                                                                                       17  17
                                                                                                   NEW IDEAS
                                                                                                                                        10         10
                                                                                                                                                                7




Keep track    Inform       Inform Help society Formulate   Influence   Let off   Alternative   Serve as     Influence      Help      Critique    Critique   Earn money
of thoughts people on people on                new ideas     public    steam     perspective    political     media     org/cause    political   media
           relevant info recent info                        opinion                            watchdog                             opponents
Boxed scores are significantly higher at 95% CI
WHY do they CONTINUE to blog?
        KEEP TRACK OF
          THOUGHTS
                         top 2 box rating
                            FORMULATE
                         (Very much + much)


   63
                            NEW IDEAS
               57
                            53
                                        INFORM PEOPLE ON
                                       MOST47
                                       50   RELEVANT INFO
                                                               43          43           43
                                                                               40
                                                                 SERVE AS POLITICAL
                                                                    WATCHDOG
                                                                                                               27          27

                                                                                                   HELP SOCIETY                        17

                                                                                                                                                   10

                                                                                                                                                                3


Keep track Formulate       Inform     Serve as Help society Alternative Influence     Inform      Let off      Help     Influence    Critique    Critique   Earn money
of thoughts new ideas    people on     political            perspective   public     people on    steam     org/cause     media      political   media
                        relevant info watchdog                           opinion    recent info                                     opponents
Boxed scores are significantly higher at 95% CI
How blogs promote participation?
Activity                                          Frequency Percentage
Announce an event                        Expressive participation
                                                  18        60%
Encourage readers to contact an elected official  9         30%
Other                                             6         20%
Free advertising for a candidate                  4         13%
Don't know                                        2         7%
Raise money                                       1         3%
                                              Political campaign
Paid advertising for a candidate                  0         0%
Not applicable                                    5         17%
Encourage readers to participate OFF-line
Activity                                 Frequency  Percentage
Vote or register to vote                     17         57%
                                     Conventional & legitimate
Attend a peaceful demonstration              17         57%
Sign a petition                              14         47%
Join a protest rally                Unconventional but legitimate
                                             14         47%
Join a political group/movement               7         23%
Campaign for a candidate                      4         13%
Other                                         3         10%
      Engage in charity
      Participate in elections
      Be critical and analytical
Practice civil disobedience                 2          7%
                                      Unconventional & illegal
Encourage readers to participate ON-line
Activity                                 Frequency    Percentage
 Visit other blogs                          26           87%
 Visit other websites     Neutral, conflict-free networking
                                            22           73%
 Write/send comments to your blog           19           63%
 Join an online cause       Political stand,15
                                             support mobilization
                                                         50%
 Sign an online petition                    10           33%
 Write/send comments to other blogs         10           33%
 Join a blogswarm                            8           27%
 Other                                       2            7%
 Donate money                                1            3%
 Don't know/ refuse                          1            3%
 Not applicable                              1            3%
Blogger Political Activities BEFORE and AFTER
                                            Prior to creating After creating
Activity                                          blog             blog
Voted                                             87%              73%
Attended a rally, protest or march                67%              60%
Sent e-mail or letters to elected officials       43%              40%
Attended a political fund raiser                  20%              17%
Worked on a campaign                              37%              40%
Attended ablogging, although respondents feel “much more” informed
 AFTER local community meeting                    57%              47%
 about political issues, but only “somewhat” sure about their 13%
Others                                            17%
 influence on politics or political discourse.
N/A                                                3%               3%

• No significant difference before and after blogging (at 95% CI)
• Blogging did not significantly change participation in these
  political activities
• Some activities are time-specific, such as “voting”
Blogger & their Readers: Similar Profile
                                                        Blogger   Blog Reader
                          Answer with highest
Profile                                                   (%)         (%)
                          frequency
                                                         N = 30      N = 64
Gender                    Male                             80          59
                          Female                           20          41   51% ↑

Age                       25 to 34 years old               53          48
Location                  Metro Manila           40%↑      67          48
                          Other Regions                    23          41   44% ↑
                          Abroad                           10           9
                          Refused                           -           2
Educational attainment    College                          57          69
Employment                Currently employed               87          88
Socio-economic status     Upper Income (P50,001 up)        40          42
Internet use (in years)   7+ years                         70          66
Internet use (mode)       Broadband subscription at        87          84
                          home
Membership in a           No affiliation                  67          88
political organisation
WHY Readers Visit Political Blogs
Reasons                                         Frequency   Percentage
Keep updated; Gain awareness and more
information                                        22          34%
Know/read views of others                          16          25%
Validate my opinion vis-à-vis others' views         8          13%
Gain more info and learn                            4           6%
Know about issues not picked up my mainstream
media                                               4          6%
Passive; coincidental                               2          3%
Politically-inclined                                2          3%
Educate the masses; exchange thoughts               1          2%
Entertainment; opinion                              1          2%
Written/recommended by a friend                     1          2%
Weigh critical views/analyses                       3          5%
                                                   64         100%
HOW Blogs benefit readers
 Benefits                                     Frequency Percentage
Be informed                                       18       28%
Raise social/political awareness                  9        14%
Validate opinion vis-a-vis others' views          9        14%
Know other people's views                         9        14%
Help shape and inform one's opinion               5         8%
Broaden views/perspective                         5         8%
Keep updated                                      4         6%
Know about issues not picked up by mainstream
media                                             4         6%


• Main reason for, and benefit of, reading political blogs
  are associated with INFORMATION.
Reader Political Activities BEFORE and AFTER
                                                                      Prior to
                                                                     accessing       After accessing
Activity                                                           political blogs   political blogs
Voted                                                                    72*                50
Attended a rally, protest or march                                       50                 38
Sent e-mail or letters to elected officials                              22                 28
Attended a political fund raiser                                          8                  5
Worked on a campaign                                                     27                 28
Attended a local community meeting                                       33                 31
Others                                                                    3                16**
None / NA                                                                                    9
Write political blogs/post of their own                                                      5
Attended President Aquino's funeral                                                          2
* Incidence significantly higher before blog reading (at 95% CI)
** Incidence significantly higher after blog reading (at 95% CI)

•    Voting is time-specific; Majority of “Others” did not provide an answer.
Readers’ Political CYNICISM
• Cynicism – tendency to have a negative view of, or
  negative feelings toward, politically significant objects,
  such as political institutions and processes
         Cynicism              Percentage (N = 63)*
         Low                          1.6%
         Moderate                     38.1%
         High                         60.3%
         Total                        100%

• Highest level of cynicism associated with:
   – “Competence of candidates winning the elections”
   – “Many politicians are under the control of vested interests”
   – “Most politicians are out to gain something for themselves”
Readers’ Political EFFICACY
• Efficacy – feelings of competency and beliefs that one's
  actions are consequential, which determines a person’s
  incentive to participate in politics
        Efficacy                 Percentage (N = 64)
        Low                      12.5%
        Moderate                 48.4%
        High                     39.1%
        Total                    100%

• Highest level of efficacy associated with:
   – “Having a say about what the government does”
   – “Ways to have a say other than voting”
   – “Understanding what is going on in politics, government”
Some Observations
• Survey results were triangulated with data from elite
  interviews and focus group discussions
      Interviews (May 2009 to April 2010)
      FGDs:
       Manila FGD - 20 Feb 2010
       Cebu FGD - 22 May 2010
       Davao FGD - 29 May 2010

• Some critical issues were highlighted in interviews and
  discussions
On the “Politics” of Political Blogging
• Male dominance among bloggers
      Aggressiveness and violence in online debates
      Stressful especially for women
      “Men won’t accept defeat”

• Bloggers of the same opinion stick together
      Polarization—blogs tend to invite, nurture a following from
       like-minded individuals who agree with blogger’s views

• Small audience, but some more influential than others:
      When blogger is already reputable, offline
      When blog becomes viral
      When blog gets picked up by mainstream media
      When blog gets attention of influential and “gatekeepers”
On Political Blogs and Social Change
• Blogging aids in creating public consciousness
   – Highest popularity in PCIJ blog: “Hello Garci” and “F4”

• Convergence or complementation of different media
   – Necessary to effectively shape public opinion!
   – Complemented by face-to-face mobilization

• Blogging is only one form of participation
   – Social change instituted outside blogosphere
• Blogging on the decline
   – Facebook & Twitter increasingly used for political
     information and mobilization!
   – SNS increases exposure of blogs
On Political Blogging and Journalism
On Political Blogging and Journalism
• Low-cost, non-hierarchical, decentralized
   – Blogs criticized against journalistic standards: accuracy and
     accountability
• Traditional vs. Citizen Journalism: A Caution
   – In traditional journalism, stories go thru editor, publisher
     has legal accountability
   – In blogs, blogger functions as writer, editor, and publisher!
   – Foregone editorial filter makes blogger solely responsible
     for what she or he writes
• Journalist Blogging (J-blogging)
   – Journalists as source of political information thru blogs
   – Blogs transforming journalism or j-blogs normalized?
What did we find out? (1)
• A-list Filipino political bloggers & their readers are:
   – Majority are young males
   – Have the resources (money, time, literacy, broadband)
   – Located in country’s political capital
• Filipinos start to blog to keep track of thoughts and
  inform others; continue to formulate new ideas
   – In sync w/ readers’ reasons and perceived benefits
   – Self-serving motivations dominate for both
• Credibility is currency in the blogosphere
   – A-list bloggers show antagonism toward paid hacks
   – Readers look to credible bloggers, with established
     reputation offline or in mainstream media
What did we find out? (2)
• Most engage in expressive, conventional, &
  legitimate forms of participation
   – Critical yet non-hostile actors in political blogosphere

• No significant difference in participation for both
  bloggers and readers before and after accessing blogs
   – No indication that blogs encourage more participation.
• Blogs are a medium for providing/acquiring
  information, raise awareness and enrich knowledge
   – increased knowledge of “real politics” may have contributed
     to readers’ high level of cynicism
   – may have downplayed value of resources, as most readers
     feel only moderately efficacious and uncertain of influence
What did we find out? (3)
• Political blogs have yet to create tangible macro-
  impact on political participation
   –   Most contribution limited to information-sharing, for now
   –   No influence on political activities in “politics as usual”
   –   More value-added during urgent political issues or “crisis”
   –   Gain traction when it goes viral, picked up by mainstream
       media, and/or attract attention of gatekeepers.

• Despite limited impact, blogs formulate new ideas
   – Could lead to more vibrant discussions, online/offline
   – Support democracy by allowing expression and encouraging
     participation despite the odds in Philippine politics.
Sidelined Issues
• Disengagement from online political discussion
   – Due to bickering and personal attacks among bloggers and
     readers

• Wrong info or smear campaigns can spread like
  wildfire thru blogs
   – Accuracy sacrificed for quick access to controversial
     information

• Censor blogs? Bloggers’ Code of ethics?
   – High-profile case of bloggers sued in court by private
     individuals and government official
Future Research
• Catalytic effect of SNS, like Facebook, and micro-
  blogging site, Twitter in mobilizing netizens
• How blogs, micro-blogs, and SNS help shape and
  influence political attitude vs. traditional media
• Content analysis of blogs and comments thread
• New governance approach using new media for
  political communication
   – Pnoy replying directly to a netizen’s note on Facebook
Thank you.
      Mary Grace P. Mirandilla-Santos
    mg(dot)mirandilla(at)gmail(dot)com
     http://gracemirandilla.tumblr.com
     http://twitter.com/gracemirandilla
http://www.linkedin.com/in/gracemirandilla

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A-list Filipino Political Bloggers & Readers

  • 1. A-LIST FILIPINO POLITICAL BLOGGERS AND THEIR READERS: WHO THEY ARE, WHY THEY ACCESS BLOGS, & HOW THEY PERCEIVE, & PARTICIPATE IN, POLITICS* Mary Grace Mirandilla-Santos SIRCA Grantee 26 February 2011, National College of Public Administration and Governance (NCPAG), University of the Philippines, Diliman, Quezon City, Philippines
  • 2. * This work was carried out with the aid of a SIRCA (Strengthening ICTD Research Capacity in Asia) grant from the International Development Research Centre (IDRC), Ottawa, Canada, and administrative support from the Singapore Internet Research Centre (SiRC), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. The project was managed under the Centre for Research and Communication in Manila, Philippines.
  • 3. Internet, Blogging, and Politics PUBLIC SPHERE INTERNET has changed the nature of political communication and the landscape ELECTRONIC of political participation REPUBLIC User-friendly Personalized Low-cost Social BLOGS promising democratic tool for providing information, facilitating political communication, and influencing nature and level of political participation. But, only anecdotal evidence on Filipino bloggers, how they affect their readers, and how both engage in political activities.
  • 4. Curious Connections • Blogs are founded on bloggers’ motivation and personal contexts: predisposition, resources, self- interests, and environment • Political participation – based on actor’s intention to influence distribution of social goods and social values and government action • Actors’ motivations and resources are important factors in understanding: (i) blogs as a form of political participation (ii) how blogs are used to promote participation (iii) potential of blogs in enhancing participation
  • 5. What we wanted to find out • A-list Filipino political bloggers  Who they are  Why they write political blogs  Whether and how they participate in politics  Whether and how they encourage readers to participate, online and offline • Political blog readers  Who they are  Why they read political blogs  What their attitude is toward politics  Whether and how they participate in politics, online and offline
  • 6. How we did it • Online Survey  30 A-list Filipino political bloggers (June to Oct 2009) (McKenna & Pole, 2004 and Ekdale et al. ,2007)  64 political blog readers (Feb to May 2009) (McKenna & Pole, 2004 and Gorospe-Jamon, 1998) • Elite interviews  Political bloggers  Academics  Journalists  Communications experts • Focus group discussions (FGDs)  Metro Manila (20 Feb 2010)  Cebu City (22 May 2010)  Davao City (29 May 2010)
  • 7. Some notes on Sampling • No consensus on how to define a political blog  Searchability in Google and Yahoo! using key search terms: “Philippine” “political” “politics” “blog”  Extract individual blogs from blog directories, ranking sites • Selection criteria  word “politics” in blog description or tags;  author is a private individual, Filipino citizen, 18 years old or up;  blog at least 1 year, with recent posts (from March to May 2009) about politics, average of 2 posts per month  contact detail available (or active comment feature) • A-list Filipino bloggers are established and popular  Independent ranking undertaken using http://popuri.us and http://pagerankall.com
  • 8. WHO are A-List Filipino Political Bloggers? Male, 25-34 y/o, Metro Manila-based; college- educated, employed, high-income; veteran internet users; broadband at home & work Blogging for 2-4 years, 1-2 hrs/day, 3-5 days/week; All blogs allow comments, almost all have links to other political blogs; Read 10+ other blogs Feel that blogging is “a form of political participation” that has led to “an exchange of ideas among individuals even in the real world.”
  • 9. WHY did they START to blog? KEEP TRACK OF THOUGHTS top 2 box rating (Very much + much) INFORM PEOPLE ON 63 MOST RELEVANT INFO 53 53 INFORM PEOPLE ON 47MOST RECENT INFO 47 40 37 HELP 37 SOCIETY 27 FORMULATE 17 17 NEW IDEAS 10 10 7 Keep track Inform Inform Help society Formulate Influence Let off Alternative Serve as Influence Help Critique Critique Earn money of thoughts people on people on new ideas public steam perspective political media org/cause political media relevant info recent info opinion watchdog opponents Boxed scores are significantly higher at 95% CI
  • 10. WHY do they CONTINUE to blog? KEEP TRACK OF THOUGHTS top 2 box rating FORMULATE (Very much + much) 63 NEW IDEAS 57 53 INFORM PEOPLE ON MOST47 50 RELEVANT INFO 43 43 43 40 SERVE AS POLITICAL WATCHDOG 27 27 HELP SOCIETY 17 10 3 Keep track Formulate Inform Serve as Help society Alternative Influence Inform Let off Help Influence Critique Critique Earn money of thoughts new ideas people on political perspective public people on steam org/cause media political media relevant info watchdog opinion recent info opponents Boxed scores are significantly higher at 95% CI
  • 11. How blogs promote participation? Activity Frequency Percentage Announce an event Expressive participation 18 60% Encourage readers to contact an elected official 9 30% Other 6 20% Free advertising for a candidate 4 13% Don't know 2 7% Raise money 1 3% Political campaign Paid advertising for a candidate 0 0% Not applicable 5 17%
  • 12. Encourage readers to participate OFF-line Activity Frequency Percentage Vote or register to vote 17 57% Conventional & legitimate Attend a peaceful demonstration 17 57% Sign a petition 14 47% Join a protest rally Unconventional but legitimate 14 47% Join a political group/movement 7 23% Campaign for a candidate 4 13% Other 3 10%  Engage in charity  Participate in elections  Be critical and analytical Practice civil disobedience 2 7% Unconventional & illegal
  • 13. Encourage readers to participate ON-line Activity Frequency Percentage Visit other blogs 26 87% Visit other websites Neutral, conflict-free networking 22 73% Write/send comments to your blog 19 63% Join an online cause Political stand,15 support mobilization 50% Sign an online petition 10 33% Write/send comments to other blogs 10 33% Join a blogswarm 8 27% Other 2 7% Donate money 1 3% Don't know/ refuse 1 3% Not applicable 1 3%
  • 14. Blogger Political Activities BEFORE and AFTER Prior to creating After creating Activity blog blog Voted 87% 73% Attended a rally, protest or march 67% 60% Sent e-mail or letters to elected officials 43% 40% Attended a political fund raiser 20% 17% Worked on a campaign 37% 40% Attended ablogging, although respondents feel “much more” informed AFTER local community meeting 57% 47% about political issues, but only “somewhat” sure about their 13% Others 17% influence on politics or political discourse. N/A 3% 3% • No significant difference before and after blogging (at 95% CI) • Blogging did not significantly change participation in these political activities • Some activities are time-specific, such as “voting”
  • 15. Blogger & their Readers: Similar Profile Blogger Blog Reader Answer with highest Profile (%) (%) frequency N = 30 N = 64 Gender Male 80 59 Female 20 41 51% ↑ Age 25 to 34 years old 53 48 Location Metro Manila 40%↑ 67 48 Other Regions 23 41 44% ↑ Abroad 10 9 Refused - 2 Educational attainment College 57 69 Employment Currently employed 87 88 Socio-economic status Upper Income (P50,001 up) 40 42 Internet use (in years) 7+ years 70 66 Internet use (mode) Broadband subscription at 87 84 home Membership in a No affiliation 67 88 political organisation
  • 16. WHY Readers Visit Political Blogs Reasons Frequency Percentage Keep updated; Gain awareness and more information 22 34% Know/read views of others 16 25% Validate my opinion vis-à-vis others' views 8 13% Gain more info and learn 4 6% Know about issues not picked up my mainstream media 4 6% Passive; coincidental 2 3% Politically-inclined 2 3% Educate the masses; exchange thoughts 1 2% Entertainment; opinion 1 2% Written/recommended by a friend 1 2% Weigh critical views/analyses 3 5% 64 100%
  • 17. HOW Blogs benefit readers Benefits Frequency Percentage Be informed 18 28% Raise social/political awareness 9 14% Validate opinion vis-a-vis others' views 9 14% Know other people's views 9 14% Help shape and inform one's opinion 5 8% Broaden views/perspective 5 8% Keep updated 4 6% Know about issues not picked up by mainstream media 4 6% • Main reason for, and benefit of, reading political blogs are associated with INFORMATION.
  • 18. Reader Political Activities BEFORE and AFTER Prior to accessing After accessing Activity political blogs political blogs Voted 72* 50 Attended a rally, protest or march 50 38 Sent e-mail or letters to elected officials 22 28 Attended a political fund raiser 8 5 Worked on a campaign 27 28 Attended a local community meeting 33 31 Others 3 16** None / NA 9 Write political blogs/post of their own 5 Attended President Aquino's funeral 2 * Incidence significantly higher before blog reading (at 95% CI) ** Incidence significantly higher after blog reading (at 95% CI) • Voting is time-specific; Majority of “Others” did not provide an answer.
  • 19. Readers’ Political CYNICISM • Cynicism – tendency to have a negative view of, or negative feelings toward, politically significant objects, such as political institutions and processes Cynicism Percentage (N = 63)* Low 1.6% Moderate 38.1% High 60.3% Total 100% • Highest level of cynicism associated with: – “Competence of candidates winning the elections” – “Many politicians are under the control of vested interests” – “Most politicians are out to gain something for themselves”
  • 20. Readers’ Political EFFICACY • Efficacy – feelings of competency and beliefs that one's actions are consequential, which determines a person’s incentive to participate in politics Efficacy Percentage (N = 64) Low 12.5% Moderate 48.4% High 39.1% Total 100% • Highest level of efficacy associated with: – “Having a say about what the government does” – “Ways to have a say other than voting” – “Understanding what is going on in politics, government”
  • 21. Some Observations • Survey results were triangulated with data from elite interviews and focus group discussions  Interviews (May 2009 to April 2010)  FGDs: Manila FGD - 20 Feb 2010 Cebu FGD - 22 May 2010 Davao FGD - 29 May 2010 • Some critical issues were highlighted in interviews and discussions
  • 22. On the “Politics” of Political Blogging • Male dominance among bloggers  Aggressiveness and violence in online debates  Stressful especially for women  “Men won’t accept defeat” • Bloggers of the same opinion stick together  Polarization—blogs tend to invite, nurture a following from like-minded individuals who agree with blogger’s views • Small audience, but some more influential than others:  When blogger is already reputable, offline  When blog becomes viral  When blog gets picked up by mainstream media  When blog gets attention of influential and “gatekeepers”
  • 23. On Political Blogs and Social Change • Blogging aids in creating public consciousness – Highest popularity in PCIJ blog: “Hello Garci” and “F4” • Convergence or complementation of different media – Necessary to effectively shape public opinion! – Complemented by face-to-face mobilization • Blogging is only one form of participation – Social change instituted outside blogosphere • Blogging on the decline – Facebook & Twitter increasingly used for political information and mobilization! – SNS increases exposure of blogs
  • 24. On Political Blogging and Journalism
  • 25. On Political Blogging and Journalism • Low-cost, non-hierarchical, decentralized – Blogs criticized against journalistic standards: accuracy and accountability • Traditional vs. Citizen Journalism: A Caution – In traditional journalism, stories go thru editor, publisher has legal accountability – In blogs, blogger functions as writer, editor, and publisher! – Foregone editorial filter makes blogger solely responsible for what she or he writes • Journalist Blogging (J-blogging) – Journalists as source of political information thru blogs – Blogs transforming journalism or j-blogs normalized?
  • 26. What did we find out? (1) • A-list Filipino political bloggers & their readers are: – Majority are young males – Have the resources (money, time, literacy, broadband) – Located in country’s political capital • Filipinos start to blog to keep track of thoughts and inform others; continue to formulate new ideas – In sync w/ readers’ reasons and perceived benefits – Self-serving motivations dominate for both • Credibility is currency in the blogosphere – A-list bloggers show antagonism toward paid hacks – Readers look to credible bloggers, with established reputation offline or in mainstream media
  • 27. What did we find out? (2) • Most engage in expressive, conventional, & legitimate forms of participation – Critical yet non-hostile actors in political blogosphere • No significant difference in participation for both bloggers and readers before and after accessing blogs – No indication that blogs encourage more participation. • Blogs are a medium for providing/acquiring information, raise awareness and enrich knowledge – increased knowledge of “real politics” may have contributed to readers’ high level of cynicism – may have downplayed value of resources, as most readers feel only moderately efficacious and uncertain of influence
  • 28. What did we find out? (3) • Political blogs have yet to create tangible macro- impact on political participation – Most contribution limited to information-sharing, for now – No influence on political activities in “politics as usual” – More value-added during urgent political issues or “crisis” – Gain traction when it goes viral, picked up by mainstream media, and/or attract attention of gatekeepers. • Despite limited impact, blogs formulate new ideas – Could lead to more vibrant discussions, online/offline – Support democracy by allowing expression and encouraging participation despite the odds in Philippine politics.
  • 29. Sidelined Issues • Disengagement from online political discussion – Due to bickering and personal attacks among bloggers and readers • Wrong info or smear campaigns can spread like wildfire thru blogs – Accuracy sacrificed for quick access to controversial information • Censor blogs? Bloggers’ Code of ethics? – High-profile case of bloggers sued in court by private individuals and government official
  • 30. Future Research • Catalytic effect of SNS, like Facebook, and micro- blogging site, Twitter in mobilizing netizens • How blogs, micro-blogs, and SNS help shape and influence political attitude vs. traditional media • Content analysis of blogs and comments thread • New governance approach using new media for political communication – Pnoy replying directly to a netizen’s note on Facebook
  • 31. Thank you. Mary Grace P. Mirandilla-Santos mg(dot)mirandilla(at)gmail(dot)com http://gracemirandilla.tumblr.com http://twitter.com/gracemirandilla http://www.linkedin.com/in/gracemirandilla