A hockey riot occurred on June 15, 2011 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Riots involve crowds. The presence of social media changes the spatial and temporal elements of the crowd, a process that contributes to online collective interpretations of social events, including riots. A key element of this process concerns the definition of the situation. Using Qualitative Media Analysis, we illustrate how the researcher of everyday life can retrieve and examine an accumulation of “definitions of situations” from social media, a process that provides insight into collective interpretations, including how online users made sense of the Vancouver riot. We begin with a short overview of the riot, briefly profile collective behavior in relation...
Social media can help the police in many ways: engaging the local communities, sharing information a...
Existing literature on collective action suggests that social protest activity is often driven by st...
For social scientists, the widespread adoption of social media presents both an opportunity and a ch...
The 2011 Vancouver Stanley Cup riot (VSCR)—one of the most significant sports-related public disorde...
This paper considers two interlinked developments of the 2011 Vancouver riots in British Columbia, C...
Commentary on the recent riots largely reflects ideological differences with political discourse rev...
In June 2011, during the ice hockey Stanley Cup, as the Vancouver Canucks were losing, riots started...
Purpose – This article aims to explore the impact of new social media on the 2011 English riots. Des...
On the 15th June 2011 the ice hockey Stanley Cup final series between the Vancouver Canucks and the ...
Social media policing is composed of individual and institutional activity. Instead of supplanting c...
Social media, such as microblogging, is a powerful medium for sharing information and organizing re...
The use of social media during crises has been explored in a variety of natural and man-made crisis ...
<p>The issues of ‘race’, place and its connections to traditional and social media have never been s...
In crises and disasters, social media not only facilitates mobilization, sharing of critical informa...
The use of social media during crises has been explored in a variety of natural and man-made crisis ...
Social media can help the police in many ways: engaging the local communities, sharing information a...
Existing literature on collective action suggests that social protest activity is often driven by st...
For social scientists, the widespread adoption of social media presents both an opportunity and a ch...
The 2011 Vancouver Stanley Cup riot (VSCR)—one of the most significant sports-related public disorde...
This paper considers two interlinked developments of the 2011 Vancouver riots in British Columbia, C...
Commentary on the recent riots largely reflects ideological differences with political discourse rev...
In June 2011, during the ice hockey Stanley Cup, as the Vancouver Canucks were losing, riots started...
Purpose – This article aims to explore the impact of new social media on the 2011 English riots. Des...
On the 15th June 2011 the ice hockey Stanley Cup final series between the Vancouver Canucks and the ...
Social media policing is composed of individual and institutional activity. Instead of supplanting c...
Social media, such as microblogging, is a powerful medium for sharing information and organizing re...
The use of social media during crises has been explored in a variety of natural and man-made crisis ...
<p>The issues of ‘race’, place and its connections to traditional and social media have never been s...
In crises and disasters, social media not only facilitates mobilization, sharing of critical informa...
The use of social media during crises has been explored in a variety of natural and man-made crisis ...
Social media can help the police in many ways: engaging the local communities, sharing information a...
Existing literature on collective action suggests that social protest activity is often driven by st...
For social scientists, the widespread adoption of social media presents both an opportunity and a ch...