

New Insights on Tech and the Crisis of Democracy
11 snips Aug 24, 2025
In this discussion, Steven Livingston, a prominent professor at George Washington University, and Michael Miller from City College delve into the crisis of democracy influenced by technology. They explore the spread of disinformation and its impact on civil society, as well as the relationship between QAnon and the Republican Party. Kate Starbird and Josephine Lukito examine the narratives shaping political dynamics and the resilience required for researchers tackling these critical issues. Their insights shed light on the complexities of radicalism and democratic backsliding.
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Digital Surrogates Reconfigure Organizing
- Digital platforms create new organizational forms called digital surrogate organizations that act like civil society groups.
- These online collectives can mobilize resources, norms, and action much like traditional organizations.
The Conservative Dilemma Explained
- Ziblatt's conservative dilemma explains why conservative parties ally with surrogate groups and adopt cross-cutting cultural issues.
- Those alliances and hot-button narratives let parties win elections despite economic divisions.
Influence Is A Two-Way Street
- Participatory disinformation shows influence flows both ways between influencers and audiences.
- Audiences co-create frames and sometimes radicalize elites as much as elites radicalize audiences.