- Home
- Creative & Digital
- Economics
- Education
- Environment & Planning
- Health
- Indigenous
- International
- Justice
- Politics
- Social Policy
| Public discourse in the Russian blogosphere: mapping RuNet politics and mobilization |
02 November 2010This paper analyses Russian blogs to discover networks of discussion around politics and public affairs.
With funding from the MacArthur Foundation, the Berkman Center is undertaking a two-year research project to investigate the role of the Internet in Russian society. The study will include a number of interrelated areas of inquiry that contribute to and draw upon the Russian Internet, including the Russian blogosphere, Twitter, and the online media ecology.
In addition to investigating a number of core Internet and communications questions, a key goal for the project is to test, refine, and integrate various methodological approaches to the study of the Internet more broadly.
This working paper analyses the Russian blogosphere, with an emphasis on politics; it is the project's first public research release.
The authors analysed Russian blogs to discover networks of discussion around politics and public affairs. Beginning with an initial set of over five million blogs, the authors used social network analysis to identify a highly active ‘Discussion Core’ of over 11,000. These were clustered according to long term patterns of citations within posts, and the resulting segmentation characterized through both automated and human content analysis.
Key findings include:
By Bruce Etling, Karina Alexanyan, John Kelly, Robert Faris, John Palfrey, and Urs Gasser
Subscribe to CCI Creative Economy Updates