AdlerE. ScottGentChariti E.OvermeyerCary B.. 1998. The home style homepage: Legislator use of the World Wide Web for constituency contact. Legislative Studies Quarterly23, no. 4:585–95.
2.
AlperinDavida J.SchultzDavid. 2003. E-Democracy: Legislative-constituent communications in Minnesota and Wisconsin. Paper presented at annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, 27 August, Philadelphia.
3.
BridgesTyler. 2002. Bad bet on the bayou: The rise of gambling in Louisiana and the fall of Governor Edwin Edwards. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux.
4.
CarlsonPatricia J.DavisGordon B.. 1998. An investigation of media selections among directors and managers: From self to other orientation. MIS Quarterly23, no. 3:335–63.
5.
CooperChristopher A.2002. E-mail in the state legislatures: Evidence from three states. State and Local Government Review34, no. 2:127–32.
6.
DaftRichard L.MacintoshNorman. 1981. A tentative exploration into the amount and equivocality of information processing in organizational work units. Administrative Science Quarterly26: 207–24.
7.
DaftRichard L.MacintoshNorman. 1984. Information richness: A new approach to managerial behavior and organizational design. In Research in organizational behavior, 243–85. edited byStawBarry M.CummingsL. L.. Greenwich, CT: JAI Press.
8.
DaftRichard L.MacintoshNorman. 1986. Organizational information requirements, media richness and structural design. Management Science32, no. 5:554–71.
9.
FerberPaulFoltzFranzPuglieseRudy. 2003. The politics of state legislature Websites: Making e-government more participatory. Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society23, no. 3:157–67.
10.
LengelRobert H.DaftRichard L.. 1988. The selection of communication media as an executive skill. The Academy of Management Executive2, no. 3:225–32.
11.
LilleyWilliamIIIDeFrancoLaurence J.BernsteinMark F.. 1998. The almanac of state legislatures: Changing patterns, 1990–1997. Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly.
12.
MaddenMary. 2003. America's online pursuits: The changing picture of who's online and what they do. Pew Internet & American Life Project. www.pewin-ternet.org.
13.
MaestasCherieNeeleyGrant W.RichardsonLilliard E.Jr.2003. The state of surveying legislators: Dilemmas and suggestions. State Politics and Policy Quarterly3: 90–108.
14.
MahtesianCharles. 1997. The sick legislature syndrome. Governing10 (February): 16–20.
15.
MarkusM. Lynne. 1995. Electronic mail as the medium of managerial choice. Organizational Science5, no. 4:502–27.
16.
McManusDenise. J.SankarChetan S.CarrHouston H.FordF. Nelson. 2002. Intraorganizational versus interorganizational uses and benefits of electronic mail. Information Resources Management Journal15, no. 3:1–13.
Nicholson-CrottySeanMeierKenneth J.. 2002. Size doesn't matter: In defense of single-state studies. State Politics and Policy Quarterly2, no. 4:411–22.
19.
NorrisPippa. 2001. Digital divide: Civic engagement, information poverty, and the Internet worldwide. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
20.
RainieLeeFoxSusannahHorriganJohnLenhartAmandaSpoonerTom. 2000. Tracking online life: How women use the Internet to cultivate relationships with family and friends. Washington, DC: Pew Internet American Life Project. www.pewinternet.org/PPF/r/11/report_display.asp.
21.
RichardsonLilliard E.Jr.DaughertyLinda M.FreemanPatricia K.. 2001. E-mail contact between constituents and state legislators. State and Local Government Review33, no. 1:23–31.
22.
ShefferMary Lou. 2003. State legislators' perceptions of the use of e-mail in constituent communication. Journal of Computer Mediated Communication8, no. 4:1–10. www.ascusc.org/jcmc/vol8/issue4/sheffer.html.
23.
SquirePeverill. 2000. Uncontested seats in state legislative elections. Legislative Studies Quarterly25, no. 1:131–45.
TrevinoLinda K.DaftRichard L.LengelRobert H.. 1987. Media symbolism, media richness, and media choice in organizations. Communication Research14, no. 5:553–74.