The mobilizing potential of the internet has been widely recognized but also sharply criticized. We propose and test in two studies that the social affirmation use of social media motivates individuals for collective action to achieve social change. In Study 1, we surveyed participants of a university occupation and found that enduring participation was predicted by social affirmation use, mediated by group identification. In Study 2 we experimentally tested our hypothesis, the results of which confirmed that the social affirmation use of a forum (and in particular its interactive aspect) motivated individuals for collective action to achieve social change. We discuss the theoretical and practical implications of our findings for theory and...
This study examines how social media influence collective action in the context of digital activism....
We argue that the often-used critique of social media activism as merely a ‘feel-good’ mechanism can...
As the latest instalments of protest from the Arab Spring to Occupy and beyond are digested in schol...
The mobilizing potential of the internet has been widely recognized but also sharply criticized. We ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
Social media is increasingly used for social protest, but does internet-enabled action lead to ‘slac...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2015-12This thesis investigates effects of social media...
Social media is increasingly used for social protest, but does online participation advance the aims...
Social networking sites and other internet-enabled technologies have had broad-reaching effects on A...
We review online activism and its relations with offline collective action. Social media facilitate ...
The events in several countries in the Middle East and North Africa were referred in the media as th...
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 events in several countries in the Middle East and North Africa were referred in the media as t...
This article examines the relationship between social protest and social media from the theoretical ...
This study examines how social media influence collective action in the context of digital activism....
We argue that the often-used critique of social media activism as merely a ‘feel-good’ mechanism can...
As the latest instalments of protest from the Arab Spring to Occupy and beyond are digested in schol...
The mobilizing potential of the internet has been widely recognized but also sharply criticized. We ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
Social media is increasingly used for social protest, but does internet-enabled action lead to ‘slac...
Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2015-12This thesis investigates effects of social media...
Social media is increasingly used for social protest, but does online participation advance the aims...
Social networking sites and other internet-enabled technologies have had broad-reaching effects on A...
We review online activism and its relations with offline collective action. Social media facilitate ...
The events in several countries in the Middle East and North Africa were referred in the media as th...
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 events in several countries in the Middle East and North Africa were referred in the media as t...
This article examines the relationship between social protest and social media from the theoretical ...
This study examines how social media influence collective action in the context of digital activism....
We argue that the often-used critique of social media activism as merely a ‘feel-good’ mechanism can...
As the latest instalments of protest from the Arab Spring to Occupy and beyond are digested in schol...