Don't miss our weekly PhD newsletter | Sign up now Don't miss our weekly PhD newsletter | Sign up now

  Informing citizens? Effects of imprints on digital political advertising


   Department of Psychology

This project is no longer listed on FindAPhD.com and may not be available.

Click here to search FindAPhD.com for PhD studentship opportunities
  Dr T Stafford  No more applications being accepted  Competition Funded PhD Project (UK Students Only)

About the Project

A fully funded PhD position starting October 2021

Supervised by Dr Tom Stafford, Department of Psychology, and Dr Kate Dommett from the Department of Politics, at the University of Sheffield, UK and in collaboration with the Electoral Reform Society (where the student will intern during their studies). The studentship will run alongside our Leverhulme Trust project, “Understanding online political advertising: perceptions, uses and regulation” 

As well as doctoral training in experimental psychology, advanced training in quantitative methods and open research, experience of interdisciplinary and policy engaged research, this studentship also comes with an opportunity to complete a MSc in Research Methods if you are coming straight from an undergraduate degree.

The project outline is below. Informal enquiries are welcome by email

Political campaigning is increasingly carried out online, affording campaigners new possibilities for targeting and customisation of campaign material to different audiences. These developments have changed the information landscape, having consequences for the democratic ideal of an informed citizenry. As a consequence, policy makers have argued that voters need to be given additional information through transparency disclosures, a.k.a “imprints”, with Minister Chloe Smith arguing that:

“Democracy must work for the people – and empowering our citizens to participate makes our country stronger. However, there is growing concern about the transparency of the sources of political campaigning online, which is starting to have a negative impact on trust and confidence in our elections and democracy” (Cabinet Office, 2020, p.7)

Whilst the Government has begun to pursue policies designed to boost transparency, the impact of using mandatory information disclosures on online political campaign materials (“digital imprints”) on public attitudes and behaviour is unknown, making it unclear whether attempts to inform citizens will boost public confidence and trust, or result in ‘backfire’ effects.

Developed in partnership with the Electoral Reform Society (ERS), who have an active research programme on voter information and digital campaigning, this studentship will use survey and experimental designs to explore the effect of different regulatory responses designed to promote transparency and an informed citizenry. The student will test the impact of different possible digital imprints on voter response. Of interest is how voters use imprints to inform their interpretation of specific pieces of political information (e.g. digital campaign adverts). The project is also concerned with the overall impact on trust and confidence in political actors and the democratic system. The student will identify best practice for future regulation and policy design. 

Reference: Cabinet Office (2020).Transparency in digital campaigning: technical consultation on digital imprints. https://www.gov.uk/

This project is funded by the ESRC WRDTP. Fees are paid at the UK level and a stipend of £15,285/year provided (+ additional funds to support research training).

The award is available on either a 1+3 or +3 basis. A 1+3 studentship provides funding for four years, completing the MA in Social Research in the 1st year, followed by 3 years research funding for a PhD. A +3 studentship provides funding for three years of PhD; this is only available to candidates who already have an MA in Social Research or a comparable Masters in research methods.

For additional details please see https://wrdtp.ac.uk/studentships/.    

The student needs to commence their studies on 1st October 2021.

Eligibility: The candidate should have a strong academic background in psychology, with a 1st or strong 2:1 undergraduate degree predicted or obtained. 

Please direct any questions about eligibility to [Email Address Removed]

To apply, please email [Email Address Removed] by the deadline with

- a CV (1 page); please highlight any relevant project work.

- a cover letter explaining why you want to do a PhD and this PhD in particular (1 page); please state whether you are applying for the 1+3 or +3 route.

- proposal for how the effect of imprints on public confidence and trust could be investigated using the tools of experiment psychology (no more than 2 pages). This will introduce you own ideas, including brief details on both rationale and research methodology.

Politics & Government (30) Psychology (31)

Funding Notes

Competition funded project - UK Students only (includes EU students with settled status)

References

Cabinet Office (2020).Transparency in digital campaigning: technical consultation on digital imprints. https://www.gov.uk/

How good is research at University of Sheffield in Psychology, Psychiatry and Neuroscience?


Research output data provided by the Research Excellence Framework (REF)

Click here to see the results for all UK universities

Where will I study?

Search Suggestions
Search suggestions

Based on your current searches we recommend the following search filters.