Abstract

This study aims to determine how the informal communication strategy is used by women to achieve their political position in government villages. The essence of informal communications is not to follow any specific rules and procedures. the studies of informal communications have remained the question cause there is not a clear form of informal communication. This study has been contributed to the women's informal political communication in Baliuk village to fulfill the gap of informal communication studies. There are three strategies that women used to dominate political representatives in Baliuk Village Government. First, the women have dominated the political issue in Village, second, women’s have dominated the informal channel, second women dominated the informal political communication channels, and the third, women have dominated the informal campaign for BPD’s election. The main factors from those strategies are how the women do the interpersonal conversation and how they made gossip in every aspect and access of communication itself for their political interest. The women have a concern about how to use an alternative way of communications to gain power in a political position, then they have to succeed dominated Badan Permusyawaratan Desa or BPD as the representatives' institution for village people.

Highlights

  • Political practice has changed, at before the world of politics has been owned by men but has been asked women’s role

  • There are numerous attempts to analyse the term of women in political communication

  • This study has explained about women has used informal political communication to achieve their political interest in local election at village level

Read more

Summary

Introduction

At before the world of politics has been owned by men but has been asked women’s role. The progress of women participation in political functions and positions of influence is one of the most significant developments of the current decade in the political arena (Fracchiolla, 2011, GrebelskyLichtman, 2015). The stigma against women in politics is still alive and well. They continue to face structural, socioeconomic, institutional and cultural barriers thats made women political progress is slow and uneven. Communicative political participation becomes a vital part of the scholarship of critical democracy and power studies (Blaug, 2002; Van der Donk et al, 2004; Peretti & Micheletti, 2004)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call