Dissemin is shutting down on January 1st, 2025

Published in

Brill Academic Publishers, Comparative Sociology, 3(14), p. 386-401

DOI: 10.1163/15691330-12341347

Links

Tools

Export citation

Search in Google Scholar

Old Questions, New Techniques: A Research Note on the Computational Identification of Political Elites

Journal article published in 2015 by Jacqueline Hicks, Vincent Traag ORCID, Ridho Reinanda
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

Full text: Download

Green circle
Preprint: archiving allowed
Green circle
Postprint: archiving allowed
Red circle
Published version: archiving forbidden
Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

This paper presents a new method of identifying a nation’s political elite using computational techniques on digitised newspaper articles. It begins by describing the three most widely used methods of identifying political elites: positional, decisional and reputational. It then introduces the “reported elite method”, exploring the kinds of elites it detects and how well it reflects the composition of political elites in our case study of Indonesia. Compared to the other existing methods, we find that our method casts a much wider net when searching for political elites, resulting in many more people from civil society, far fewer formal politicians, and challenging conventional notions of who is a political elite. The method has two major underlying assumptions: (1) the newspapers from which the texts are drawn are free and fairly representative and (2) political power can be inferred from frequent appearance in newspapers alongside other frequently appearing individuals in computational “communities” of political elite.