Research interests include electronic rulemaking, human language technologies, manual annotation, digital citizenship, and service-learning efforts in the United States. He also edits the Journal of Information Technology and Politics and directs the Qualitative Data Analysis program.
No subject area
The Case Against Mass E-mails: Perverse Incentives and Low Quality Public Participation in U.S. Federal Rulemaking, Policy and Internet (2009)
Democracy and E-Rulemaking: Web-Based Technologies, Participation, and the Potential for Deliberation (with David Schlosberg and Stephen Zavestoski), eRulemaking Research Group (2007)
Deliberative democratic theorists and public participation scholars have become increasingly interested in institutionalized forms of...
Democracy and the Environment on the Internet: Electronic Citizen Participation in Regulatory Rulemaking (with Stephen Zavestoski and David Schlosberg), eRulemaking Research Group (2006)
We hypothesize that recent uses of the Internet as a public-participation mechanism in the United...
Whither Deliberation? Mass e-Mail Campaigns and U.S. Regulatory Rulemaking, eRulemaking Research Group (2006)
Mass e-mail campaigns are the organizational tool of choice for environmental activists seeking to inform...
eRulemaking: Issues in Current Research and Practice, eRulemaking Research Group (2005)
A rich and challenging dialogue about the shape of eRulemaking is underway. While in its...