preprints_ui: bn4gw_v1
Data license: ODbL (database) & original licenses (content) · Data source: Open Science Framework
id | title | description | date_created | date_modified | date_published | original_publication_date | publication_doi | provider | is_published | reviews_state | version | is_latest_version | preprint_doi | license | tags_list | tags_data | contributors_list | contributors_data | first_author | subjects_list | subjects_data | download_url | has_coi | conflict_of_interest_statement | has_data_links | has_prereg_links | prereg_links | prereg_link_info | last_updated |
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bn4gw_v1 | Brokerage | Brokerage connects actors in a social structure to facilitate access, exchange and flow of goods, information, opportunities, or knowledge. Brokers are socially embedded in communities and strategically situated between disparate groups, and they generate value through bridging connections and mediating social, political, and economic interactions. The dynamics of brokerage are specific to the political context where it operates, and is responsive to the changing media ecosystem, especially with the rise of digital media and networked sociality. While the concept is in its infancy in political communication, existing accounts of brokerage exemplify its theoretical relevance in facilitating strategic relations in elections and partisan politics, policy and conflict resolution, social movement, and global communication flows. These works illustrate the potential of brokerage as a communicative act in not only facilitating transactions but also instigating transformation through the brokers’ strategic exercise of agency. | 2024-09-17T00:33:33.152525 | 2024-09-17T18:22:41.215854 | 2024-09-17T18:22:21.603493 | mediarxiv | 1 | accepted | 1 | 1 | https://doi.org/10.33767/osf.io/bn4gw | CC-By Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International | brokerage; communication flows; election; policy; political communication; political intermediaries; social movement | ["brokerage", "communication flows", "election", "policy", "political communication", "political intermediaries", "social movement"] | Fatima Gaw; Cheryll Ruth Soriano | [{"id": "d65ay", "name": "Fatima Gaw", "index": 0, "orcid": null, "bibliographic": true}, {"id": "jp74w", "name": "Cheryll Ruth Soriano", "index": 1, "orcid": "0000-0003-3228-1065", "bibliographic": true}] | Fatima Gaw | Communication; Social Influence and Political Communication; Arts and Humanities; Social and Behavioral Sciences; Communication Technology and New Media | [{"id": "584240d954be81056ceca8be", "text": "Communication"}, {"id": "584240d954be81056ceca9c3", "text": "Social Influence and Political Communication"}, {"id": "584240da54be81056cecaab4", "text": "Arts and Humanities"}, {"id": "584240da54be81056cecac48", "text": "Social and Behavioral Sciences"}, {"id": "584240da54be81056cecac70", "text": "Communication Technology and New Media"}] | https://osf.io/download/66e8d67b4c1b34fa65ec9cfa | 0 | not_applicable | not_applicable | [] | 2025-04-09T21:06:16.784354 |