Citizen participation and collective action through the use of media are not new phenomena, but they are more topical than ever in the global, hyperconnected public sphere. In this post, Leonardo Custódio discusses his research on the rich media activity produced by favela-based activists. He shows how, through community media, media collectives and networks of mutual support and joint action, favela dwellers have been able to take control of communication channels and platforms to raise their own voices and demands
This proposal combines ethnographic techniques and discourse studies to investigate a collective of ...
Over the past few years, new forms of socialization of politics through social media have found expr...
In Portugal, in 2012, the movement “To hell with troika! We want our lives!” emerged from digital so...
In this chapter, we analyze the role of favela digital activism as a tool to fight against oppressio...
In modern day Brazil, new media initiatives centred in local communities are attempting to change th...
The potential use of digital media for the benefit of social movements and traditionally marginalise...
In today’s socially effervescent Brazil, social media are being used to mobilise communities for soc...
Over the past few years, new forms of socialization of politics throughsocial media have found expre...
In June 2013, protesters took to the streets of hundreds of Brazilian cities. The mobilizing factor ...
The political turmoil unleashed in recent years has influenced how people interact and organize them...
Between 2013 and 2014 Brasil saw the emerge of a new kind of social pro- test. Thousands of peopl...
The mainstream media portrays favelas in a negative light. This has been the case for over a century...
This article analyzes the role of key visual technologies in contemporary media activism in Brazil. ...
textThis dissertation interrogates two recent positions regarding the position of community activist...
In Brazil, inequalities are visually represented in its favelas. These neighborhoods are usually com...
This proposal combines ethnographic techniques and discourse studies to investigate a collective of ...
Over the past few years, new forms of socialization of politics through social media have found expr...
In Portugal, in 2012, the movement “To hell with troika! We want our lives!” emerged from digital so...
In this chapter, we analyze the role of favela digital activism as a tool to fight against oppressio...
In modern day Brazil, new media initiatives centred in local communities are attempting to change th...
The potential use of digital media for the benefit of social movements and traditionally marginalise...
In today’s socially effervescent Brazil, social media are being used to mobilise communities for soc...
Over the past few years, new forms of socialization of politics throughsocial media have found expre...
In June 2013, protesters took to the streets of hundreds of Brazilian cities. The mobilizing factor ...
The political turmoil unleashed in recent years has influenced how people interact and organize them...
Between 2013 and 2014 Brasil saw the emerge of a new kind of social pro- test. Thousands of peopl...
The mainstream media portrays favelas in a negative light. This has been the case for over a century...
This article analyzes the role of key visual technologies in contemporary media activism in Brazil. ...
textThis dissertation interrogates two recent positions regarding the position of community activist...
In Brazil, inequalities are visually represented in its favelas. These neighborhoods are usually com...
This proposal combines ethnographic techniques and discourse studies to investigate a collective of ...
Over the past few years, new forms of socialization of politics through social media have found expr...
In Portugal, in 2012, the movement “To hell with troika! We want our lives!” emerged from digital so...