This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in this recordSocial media is increasingly used for social protest, but does internet-enabled action lead to ‘slacktivism’ or promote increased activism? We show that the answer to this question depends on prior level of activism, and on beliefs about the effectiveness of individual contribution to the collective campaign. Internet-enabled action was varied quasi-experimentally, with participants (n = 143) choosing whether or not to share a campaign on social media. Participants were then informed that sharing on social media had a big (high action efficacy) or small (low action efficacy) impact on achieving the campaign's goal. Prior levels of ...
The events in several countries in the Middle East and North Africa were referred in the media as th...
We review online activism and its relations with offline collective action. Social media facilitate ...
We review online activism and its relations with offline collective action. Social media facilitate ...
Social media is increasingly used for social protest, but does internet-enabled action lead to ‘slac...
The mobilizing potential of the internet has been widely recognized but also sharply criticized. We ...
Previous research highlighted that Internet use, in particular online informationretrieval and discu...
Traditional protest behaviours are motivated by social influences (e.g., Finkel & Opp, 1991), whereb...
We review online activism and its relations with offline collective action. Social media facilitate ...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2015-12This thesis investigates effects of social media...
We argue that the often-used critique of social media activism as merely a ‘feel-good’ mechanism can...
Research has shown that micro-mobilization efforts that invoke social media rely heavily on the infl...
The continuously growing number of people participating in Internet-based, online, political activis...
The Internet has emerged as an important communication platform for the support of collective action...
The continuously growing number of people participating in Internet-based, online, political activis...
Social networking sites and other internet-enabled technologies have had broad-reaching effects on A...
The events in several countries in the Middle East and North Africa were referred in the media as th...
We review online activism and its relations with offline collective action. Social media facilitate ...
We review online activism and its relations with offline collective action. Social media facilitate ...
Social media is increasingly used for social protest, but does internet-enabled action lead to ‘slac...
The mobilizing potential of the internet has been widely recognized but also sharply criticized. We ...
Previous research highlighted that Internet use, in particular online informationretrieval and discu...
Traditional protest behaviours are motivated by social influences (e.g., Finkel & Opp, 1991), whereb...
We review online activism and its relations with offline collective action. Social media facilitate ...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2015-12This thesis investigates effects of social media...
We argue that the often-used critique of social media activism as merely a ‘feel-good’ mechanism can...
Research has shown that micro-mobilization efforts that invoke social media rely heavily on the infl...
The continuously growing number of people participating in Internet-based, online, political activis...
The Internet has emerged as an important communication platform for the support of collective action...
The continuously growing number of people participating in Internet-based, online, political activis...
Social networking sites and other internet-enabled technologies have had broad-reaching effects on A...
The events in several countries in the Middle East and North Africa were referred in the media as th...
We review online activism and its relations with offline collective action. Social media facilitate ...
We review online activism and its relations with offline collective action. Social media facilitate ...