Kate Dommett’s scientific contributions

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Figure 2: Average days in use per meta-category
Figure 4: Technology usage by party family. Unique technology ID (TID) on the horizontal axis and Days in Use. Color refers to Meta-Category. The clustering in the lower left quadrant indicates many technologies used infrequently.
Figure 5: Technologies usage by country in terms of days in use (upper) and technologies in use (lower). Unique technology ID (TID) on the horizontal axis and Days in Use. Color refers to Meta-Category type.
Figure 7: Top 10 owners of technologies in use the longest
Figure 9: Changes in the Labour Party Website Advertising and Analytics Technology Use between 2015 to 2019

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The platformisation of party politics?: A comparative study of party websites’ technological infrastructures 2012-2021
  • Article
  • Full-text available

October 2024

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26 Reads

Journal of Quantitative Description Digital Media

Kate Dommett

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Fenwick McKelvey

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Glenn Kefford

Political parties have gone digital. Political scientists in countries around the world have diagnosed the rise of the digital party and traced parties’ adoption of digital technology. Existing attempts to understand parties’ digital practices have focused on the adoption of different tools, with scholars empirically studying and theorizing how and why digital technology is used. What has received less attention is the technical architecture and origins of these tools, questions that have been more directly examined by political communication scholarship. In this paper we entwine insights from these two disciplines, interrogating the idea of ‘platformization’ in the context of political technology. Presenting a unique, longitudinal dataset that captures the technological development of political party websites in 66 parties in 16 countries, we provide unprecedented insight into the evolution of party websites and show evidence of increasing platform dependency. Our findings have important implications for our understanding of parties’ relationship with technology, showing how technological developments and monopolies can lead to increasingly homogenized practice internationally.

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