ABSTRACT
While more than a million e-mails clog the inboxes of Congress each day, some legislators can't even find their own websites without the help of their staffers. In fact, laptops aren't even allowed on the floor of the House or Senate.
But, as Dennis W. Johnson demonstrates in Congress Online, there are some savvy legislators who are taking advantage of new media to expand their power and influence-and the Congressional communications revolution is just beginning. Born out of a Pew Charitable Trusts research project of the same name, Congress Online is the definitive guide to electronic politics, pointing the way to a system that could forge a new and more immediate connection between legislators and the American people.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |9 pages
Introduction
part |1 pages
PART WIRED CITIZEN, WIRED GOVERNMENT
chapter |16 pages
New Tools for the Active Citizenry
chapter |12 pages
The Rise of Electronic Advocacy
chapter |16 pages
The Promise of Electronic Government
part |1 pages
PART CONGRESS RESPONDS
chapter |12 pages
Old Communications and New
chapter |12 pages
The E-mail Overload
chapter |18 pages
Congressional Websites
part |1 pages
PART ONLINE DEMOCRACY AND COMMUNICATION