Was the 2019 Indian election won by digital media?

Research on the reasons for the unexpected outcome of the 2019 national election in India can be divided into two strands: one strand examines the election without recourse to media, arguing that the appeals by parties to different segments of the population, referred to as identity politics, swayed...

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Main Authors: Neyazi, TA, Schroeder, R
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Taylor and Francis 2021
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author Neyazi, TA
Schroeder, R
author_facet Neyazi, TA
Schroeder, R
author_sort Neyazi, TA
collection OXFORD
description Research on the reasons for the unexpected outcome of the 2019 national election in India can be divided into two strands: one strand examines the election without recourse to media, arguing that the appeals by parties to different segments of the population, referred to as identity politics, swayed voters. The other strand has made the case that media campaigns, and digital media in particular, were decisive in shaping the electoral outcome. Among the explanations that focus on media, these can be further subdivided into those that make the case for traditional media still playing a more important role than online media, and others that argue that digital media, and perhaps even online disinformation, played a key role. In this paper, we analyze the evidence for these competing accounts, drawing on the available evidence. We argue that an explanation based on combining elements from both strands, plus the interaction between digital media and traditional media and offline mobilization, together explain Modi’s unanticipated election victory.
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spelling oxford-uuid:01cfc9bf-990a-4771-a39b-0b7b13bfee2f2022-12-23T07:38:49ZWas the 2019 Indian election won by digital media?Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:01cfc9bf-990a-4771-a39b-0b7b13bfee2fEnglishSymplectic ElementsTaylor and Francis2021Neyazi, TASchroeder, RResearch on the reasons for the unexpected outcome of the 2019 national election in India can be divided into two strands: one strand examines the election without recourse to media, arguing that the appeals by parties to different segments of the population, referred to as identity politics, swayed voters. The other strand has made the case that media campaigns, and digital media in particular, were decisive in shaping the electoral outcome. Among the explanations that focus on media, these can be further subdivided into those that make the case for traditional media still playing a more important role than online media, and others that argue that digital media, and perhaps even online disinformation, played a key role. In this paper, we analyze the evidence for these competing accounts, drawing on the available evidence. We argue that an explanation based on combining elements from both strands, plus the interaction between digital media and traditional media and offline mobilization, together explain Modi’s unanticipated election victory.
spellingShingle Neyazi, TA
Schroeder, R
Was the 2019 Indian election won by digital media?
title Was the 2019 Indian election won by digital media?
title_full Was the 2019 Indian election won by digital media?
title_fullStr Was the 2019 Indian election won by digital media?
title_full_unstemmed Was the 2019 Indian election won by digital media?
title_short Was the 2019 Indian election won by digital media?
title_sort was the 2019 indian election won by digital media
work_keys_str_mv AT neyazita wasthe2019indianelectionwonbydigitalmedia
AT schroederr wasthe2019indianelectionwonbydigitalmedia