Re-mediatization as a New Digital Approach towards Local Political Deliberation: Using Real-Time Participatory Media Production to Bring Nuance to Public Debates on Religion, Sexuality, And Migration

Publication date

2024-12-23

Authors

Nazar Kermanshahi, Shahin
van der Tuin, IrisISNI 0000000118860912
Dirks, Simon
Overkempe, Tim
Hardman, LyndaISNI 0000000392297528
Pieters, ToineORCID 0000-0002-8156-8436ISNI 0000000035417616

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

In this article, we present research findings from a participatory media production project. The project is part of a transdisciplinary AI Lab and a citizen-science initiative, intended to test the transformative potential of new platforms to mediate political deliberation about contentious issues like religion, sexuality, and migration. We aimed to assess whether our remodeled version of Pol.is, “a real-time platform for gathering, analyzing and understanding what large groups of people think in their own words,” is able to redress the blindspots of content moderation policies in an effort to “combat” toxic polarization. The rationale of this pilot study stemmed from the observation that current policies emphasize what we call the ‘subordinate’ view of platform mediatization and fail to address the audience logic, or the ‘instrumental’ view. Our approach, the participatory ‘re-mediatization’ approach, blended both views of mediatization as a heuristic tool to facilitate the desired kind of productive polarization through the “re-mediatization” of public opinion. We show that participatory media production in the domain of governance and decision making, in our case the participatory production of opinion visualizations, allows for discussion management practices that may steer platforms of dialogue away from toxic polarization and towards productive polarization or even creative relating. We conclude by suggesting that our participatory re-mediatization approach is a promising addition to the policymaking toolbox to facilitate productively polarized, local decision making.

Keywords

participatory media, citizen science, transdisciplinary research, Polarization

Citation

Nazar Kermanshahi, S, van der Tuin, I, Dirks, S, Overkempe, T, Hardman, L & Pieters, T 2024, 'Re-mediatization as a New Digital Approach towards Local Political Deliberation : Using Real-Time Participatory Media Production to Bring Nuance to Public Debates on Religion, Sexuality, And Migration', Digital Society, vol. 3, 66. https://doi.org/10.1007/s44206-024-00154-7