How political efficacy relates to online and offline political participation: a multi-level meta-analysis
How political efficacy relates to online and offline political participation: a multi-level meta-analysis
Author
Oser, Jennifer
Grinson, Amit
Boulianne, Shelley
Halperin, Eran
Faculty Advisor
Date
2022
Keywords
political efficacy , online political participation , offline political participation , multilevel random effects meta-analysis
Abstract (summary)
The rapid rise of digital media use for political participation has coincided
with an increase in concerns about citizens’ sense of their
capacity to impact political processes. These dual trends raise the
important question of how people’s online political participation is
connected to perceptions of their own capacity to participate in and
influence politics. The current study overcomes the limitation of scarce
high-quality cross-national and over-time data on these topics by
conducting a meta-analysis of all extant studies that analyze how
political efficacy relates to both online and offline political participation
using data sources in which all variables were measured simultaneously.
We identified and coded 48 relevant studies (with 184 effects)
representing 51,860 respondents from 28 countries based on surveys
conducted between 2000 and 2016. We conducted a multilevel random
effects meta-analysis to test the main hypothesis of whether
political efficacy has a weaker relationship with online political participation
than offline political participation. The findings show positive
relationships between efficacy and both forms of participation, with
no distinction in the magnitude of the two associations. In addition,
we tested hypotheses about the expected variation across time and
democratic contexts, and the results suggest contextual variation for
offline participation but cross-national stability for online participation.
The findings provide the most comprehensive evidence to date that
online participation is as highly associated with political efficacy as
offline participation, and that the strength of this association for online
political participation is stable over time and across diverse country
contexts.
Publication Information
Oser, J., Grinson, A., Boulianne, S., & Halperin, E. (2022). How political efficacy relates to online and offline political participation: A multi-level meta-analysis. Political Communication, 1-26. https://doi.org/10.1080/10584609.2022.2086329
DOI
Notes
Item Type
Article
Language
English