Emergent digital technologies keep redefining the (porous, yet analytically useful) online/offline participation dichotomy, yet the study of this evolution remains fragmented across the fields of public management, digital governance, and civic culture. Drawing on a narrative literature review, this article offers a conceptual synthesis of three central debates at the intersection of digital media and citizen participation. First, whether online participation constitutes an authentic form of citizen involvement. Second, whether digital media fundamentally expand the repertoire of participatory practices or simply replicates offline forms in digital environments. Third, whether online participation mobilizes or demobilizes traditional offline participation. Anchored in a sociotechnical perspective, this article offers explanations of how affordances from emergent technologies and evolving citizenship norms are shaping offline and online participatory practices. Points for Practitioners While online participation can mobilize offline participation, it can also lead to passive involvement (slacktivism), making it essential to design digital initiatives that encourage deeper citizen participation. Emerging trends suggest that citizens prefer personalized, expressive, and network-driven forms of participation, requiring public administrators to integrate digital tools that align with these preferences. To fully leverage online participation, policymakers should integrate insights from public management, civic culture, and digital governance to develop more effective participatory frameworks.
Rentería et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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