Collective action 2.0 : the impact of social media on collective action /
Collective Action 2.0: The Impact of Social Media on Collective Action provides a balanced look into how ICTs leverage and interact with collective action through avoiding technological determinism, utopianism, and fundamentalism, which impacts the current discourse. Recent events in different autho...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Cambridge, MA, United States :
Chandos Publishing is an imprint of Elsevier,
[2017]
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Colección: | Chandos social media series.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo (Requiere registro previo con correo institucional) |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Machine generated contents note: ch. 1 Introduction
- 1.1. #1Mai_Nazifrei
- 1.2. Hype Cycle and the Need for a Theoretical Framework
- 1.3. Reciprocal Relation Between Information and Communication Technology and Collective Action
- 1.4. Book Outline
- References
- pt. 1 Theoretical Framework
- ch. 2 What Is Social Media: A Critical View
- 2.1. Social Media as Information and Communication Technology
- 2.2. Social Media as Institutions
- 2.3. Social Media as Media
- 2.4. Beware of Social Media Determinism
- References
- ch. 3 Tehran, Tunis, Tahrir: Social Media and the Formation of Collective Action
- 3.1. From an Individual Agent to an Active Collective
- 3.2. "Facebook Revolution" Is Just Another Revolution: Social Media and the Formation of a Collective in the Arab Spring
- 3.3. Conclusions
- References
- ch. 4 Cottage, Tents, and Chocolate Pudding: The Cultural Context of the Israeli Social Justice Protests
- 4.1. Setting up the First Tent
- 4.2. Chronology of the 2010s Israeli Social Justice Protests
- 4.3. Cultural Context of Social Movements
- 4.4. Social Media and the Cultural Context of Social Justice Protests in Israel
- 4.5. Code of Israeliness? Conclusions
- References
- ch. 5 Social Network: The Relevance of Weak and Strong Ties for Mobilization Over Social Media
- 5.1. What Are Social Networks?
- 5.2. Social Media and Social Networks
- 5.3. Social Networks, Interpersonal Ties, and Mobilization Over Social Media
- 5.4. Leaderless Network?
- References
- ch. 6 Berlin Helps: Resource Mobilization and Social Media Deployment in Berlin's Refugee Aid Movement
- 6.1. One Hot Summer Day at #LaGeSo
- 6.2. Resource Mobilization Theory
- 6.3. Social Media and Resource Mobilization
- 6.4. Conclusions
- References
- pt. 2 Discussion
- ch. 7 Between Actions and Algorithms: How Social Media Facilitate and Enable Collective Action
- 7.1. Between Flickr and the Google Index
- 7.2. Between Actions and Algorithms
- 7.3. Conclusions
- References
- ch. 8 Alternative or Mainstream: The Interplay Between Social Media and Mass Media
- 8.1. Many Facets of Newsworthiness
- 8.2. Social Media
- Alternative Media?
- 8.3. Conclusions
- References
- ch. 9 Big Brother Is Watching You: Collective Action and Surveillance in Social Media
- 9.1. Stasi 2.0: State Surveillance and the Deployment of Social Media for Collective Action in Authoritarian Context
- 9.2. Living in the Post-Snowden Era: State Surveillance and the Deployment of Social Media for Collective Action in Democratic Context
- 9.3. Aiding the Enemy: Corporate Surveillance and Economic Interests on Social Media
- 9.4. Living in the Postpanopticon Era? Conclusions
- References
- ch. 10 Sharing Is Caring? Social Media and Demobilization
- 10.1. Long Tail of Slacktivism
- 10.2. Demobilization and the Structural Elements of Social Media
- 10.3. Sharing Is Caring? Conclusions
- References
- ch. 11 Right Tool in the Wrong Hands: Neutrality, Values, and Biases of Social Media Deployment
- 11.1. Wrong Hands? Negative Causes, Framing, and Social Media
- 11.2. Right Tool? Values and Biases in Social Media
- 11.3. There Is No Right Life in the Wrong One? Conclusions
- References
- pt. 3 Epilogue
- ch. 12 On the Verge of the Plateau: Epilogue.