Lindner, R.R.LindnerRiehm, U.U.Riehm2022-03-042022-03-042011https://publica.fraunhofer.de/handle/publica/22469810.2202/1944-2866.1083Petitioning is a well established form of political participation in most liberal democracies, but little is known about petitioners, their socio-demographics, motivations and assessments of petitioning processes. In 2005, the German parliament introduced public e-petitions which are submitted, signed and discussed on the Internet. This article reports a 2007 survey of 571 traditional and 350 e-petitioners. The results indicate that both petitioner samples are characterised by an above average level of general political participation and Internet use. Users of the e-petition system are younger than traditional petitioners, but the group continues to be dominated by men and those with higher levels of formal education than traditional petitioners. E-petitions seem to amplify existing inequalities in participation patterns as they predominately attract highly mobilised and politically active individuals with a disproportionately high socio-economic status.enelectronic petitionE-petitionpetitioninge-democracypolitical participatione-participatione-parliamentsocio-demographicBundestagGerman Federal Parliament303600384Broadening participation through E-petitions? An empirical study of petitions to the German parliamentjournal article