- Christian Stiegler:
The Politics of Immersive Storytelling: Virtual Reality and the Logics of Digital Ecosystems. Int. J. E Politics 8(3): 1-15 (2017) - Bradley E. Wiggins:
Navigating an Immersive Narratology: Factors to Explain the Reception of Fake News. Int. J. E Politics 8(3): 16-29 (2017) - 2016
- Tori Arthur:
Nollywood Afrogeeks: Nigerian Cinema, Digital Diasporas, and African Immigrants in the United States. Int. J. E Politics 7(3): 49-64 (2016) - Jonathan Bishop, Mark Beech:
Embodying Trust in the Electoral System: The Role of Delegated Transferable Voting for Increasing Voter Choice and Representation of Small Political Parties in the Digital Age. Int. J. E Politics 7(2): 37-50 (2016) - Aileen Blaney:
Food, Photography and the Indian Pastoral. Int. J. E Politics 7(2): 1-15 (2016) - Alejandra Boni, Monique Leivas, Teresa De La Fuente, Sergio Belda-Miquel:
Grassroots Innovation for Human Development: Exploring the Potential of Participatory Video. Int. J. E Politics 7(4): 26-39 (2016) - Michael S. Bruner, Karissa Valine, Berenice Ceja:
Women Can't Win: Gender Irony and the E-Politics of The Biggest Loser. Int. J. E Politics 7(2): 16-36 (2016) - Sara Calvo, Andres Morales:
Conducting Video Research in the Social and Solidarity Economy: Empowering the Cinderella Economy Towards Social Justice. Int. J. E Politics 7(4): 40-55 (2016) - Francis Dalisay, Matthew J. Kushin, Masahiro Yamamoto:
Conflict as a Barrier to Online Political Participation?: A Look at Political Participation in an Era of Web and Mobile Connectivity. Int. J. E Politics 7(1): 37-53 (2016) - Alexander Dhoest:
Feeling (Dis)Connected: Diasporic LGBTQs and Digital Media. Int. J. E Politics 7(3): 35-48 (2016) - Gioel Gioacchino, Kirsten Cheryll Williams:
Playing with Participatory Action Research (PAR): The Role of Digital and Audio-Visual Tools. Int. J. E Politics 7(4): 16-25 (2016) - Urmila Goel:
The Indernet: From Internet Portal to the Social Web. Int. J. E Politics 7(3): 1-14 (2016) - Yasmin Ibrahim:
Self-Production through the Banal and the Fictive: Self and the Relationship with the Screen. Int. J. E Politics 7(2): 51-61 (2016) - Morag Kobez:
The Illusion of Democracy in Online Consumer Restaurant Reviews. Int. J. E Politics 7(1): 54-65 (2016) - Koen Leurs:
Young Connected Migrants and Non-Normative European Family Life: Exploring Affective Human Right Claims of Young E-Diasporas. Int. J. E Politics 7(3): 15-34 (2016) - Barbara Pfetsch, Daniel Maier, Peter Miltner, Annie Waldherr:
Challenger Networks of Food Policy on the Internet: A Comparative Study of Structures and Coalitions in Germany, the UK, the US, and Switzerland. Int. J. E Politics 7(1): 16-36 (2016) - Roopika Risam:
Diasporizing the Digital Humanities: Displacing the Center and Periphery. Int. J. E Politics 7(3): 65-78 (2016) - Jakob Svensson, Anders Olof Larsson:
Interacting with Whom?: Swedish Parliamentarians on Twitter during the 2014 Elections. Int. J. E Politics 7(1): 1-15 (2016) - Sammia Cristina Poveda Villalba:
PAR and Digital Inclusion, An Analysis Using the Capabilities Approach and Critical Pedagogy. Int. J. E Politics 7(4): 1-15 (2016) - 2015
- Marija Anna Bekafigo, Allison Clark Pingley:
Tweeting Negative: Determinants of Negative Campaigning in the 2011 Gubernatorial Elections. Int. J. E Politics 6(1): 30-41 (2015) - Kerill Dunne:
ICTs: Convenient, Yet Subsidiary Tools in Changing Democracy. Int. J. E Politics 6(2): 1-13 (2015) - Renira Rampazzo Gambarato, Sergei Andreevich Medvedev:
Fish Fight: Transmedia Storytelling Strategies for Food Policy Change. Int. J. E Politics 6(3): 43-59 (2015) - Christopher Holmberg:
Politicization of the Low-Carb High-Fat Diet in Sweden, Promoted On Social Media by Non-Conventional Experts. Int. J. E Politics 6(3): 27-42 (2015) - Anita Howarth:
Hunger Hurts: The Politicization of an Austerity Food Blog. Int. J. E Politics 6(3): 13-26 (2015) - Daniel Barredo Ibáñez, Carlos Arcila Calderón, Jesús Arroyave, Roxana Silva:
Influence of Social Networks in the Decision to Vote: An Exploratory Survey on the Ecuadorian Electorate. Int. J. E Politics 6(4): 15-34 (2015) - Yasmin Ibrahim:
Food Porn and the Invitation to Gaze: Ephemeral Consumption and the Digital Spectacle. Int. J. E Politics 6(3): 1-12 (2015) - Celia Romm Livermore, Mahesh S. Raisinghani, Pierluigi Rippa:
The Politics of e-Learning: A Play in Four Acts. Int. J. E Politics 6(2): 30-42 (2015) - Aimée Vega Montiel:
Gender Dimension of ICTs in Latin America. Int. J. E Politics 6(4): 1-14 (2015) - Chamil Rathnayake:
From Street Protests to Facebook Campaigns: Political Cynicism, Efficacy and Online Political Engagement of Sri Lankan Students. Int. J. E Politics 6(1): 42-58 (2015) - Rodrigo Sandoval-Almazán:
Using Twitter in Political Campaigns: The Case of the PRI Candidate in Mexico. Int. J. E Politics 6(1): 1-15 (2015)