Using survey data collected from 184 local elected officials, this paper investigates how frequently local political officials use e-mail, and how important they consider e-mail, compared with telephone calls, postal mail, faxes, and meetings. Among all forms of communication, only phone calls are initiated with a similar rate of frequency as e-mail messages. E-mail is rated as important as telephone calls and meetings, and more important than letters and faxes. E-mail is used more heavily by representatives from professional county boards and city councils, but regarded as more important, relative to other communication methods, by members of non-professional city councils. Despite e-mail's limitations, it is a powerful and useful tool for “virtual representatives.”
Article
Virtual Representatives: Local Elected Officials Online
Political Science
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
11-1-2005
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Disciplines
Abstract
Citation Information
Chen, Elsa Y. “Virtual Representatives: Local Elected Officials Online.” Journal of E-Government, Volume 2, Number 1 (November 2005), p. 55-78.