Hegemonic practices in multistakeholder Internet governance: Participatory evangelism, quiet politics, and glorification of status quo at ICANN meetings
Citation:
Aaron van Klyton; Mary-Paz Arrieta-Paredes; Nicola Palladino; Ayush Soomaree, Hegemonic practices in multistakeholder Internet governance: Participatory evangelism, quiet politics, and glorification of status quo at ICANN meetings, The Information Society, 2023, 39:3, 141-157Abstract:
In this exploratory study we examine a less scrutinized aspect of multistakeholder
arrangements: the presence and directionality of hegemonic power in the language used
in the stakeholder deliberations. Specifically, we examine the deliberations of ten stakeholder
groups of ICANN’s policy development body. Using meeting transcripts from 2011 to 2020,
we operationalized hegemony as a latent, dependent variable (HEIN) by linking stakeholder
participation to the policymaking agenda. We employed a mixed-methods approach
comprising textual linguistic analysis (using DICTION 7.1), principal components analysis,
and an autoregressive moving average model to identify the statistical significance of key
variables that emerged from textual linguistic and principal components analyses. We found
that three primary rhetorical devices – participatory evangelism, quiet politics, and glorification
of the status quo – were present, which reinforce the entrenched power structure that favors
some stakeholders and interfere with other stakeholders’ efforts to influence Internet
governance decisions. In addition, four Diction variables, Commonality, Leveling Terms,
Satisfaction, and Commonality at the GNSO (Generic Names Supporting Organization) level,
yielded a positive impact on the production of hegemony, and Insistence was negatively
associated with HEIN.
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/palladinDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: Palladino, Nicola
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Journal ArticleCollections
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Full text availableKeywords:
Deliberations, DIcTIon 7.1, Hegemony, Internet governance, MultistakeholderismDOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01972243.2023.2194295Metadata
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