Sharenting – a new term emerged over the past 10 years – refers to the practice of sharing textual and audiovisual contents concerning children online by their parents or guardians, potentially impacting the construction of children’s digital identity before they can reach the age of consent. Based on a passive virtual ethnography carried out comparatively in Italian-speaking and English-speaking virtual communities focusing on children’s wellbeing and health, this paper offers an empirical contribution to the study of sharenting. While contributing to the wider debates on the practices and discourses about sharing in digital media, this paper provides an analysis of how online and offline parenting cultures affect sharenting practices; how...
Through sharenting, parents now shape their children¿s digital identity long before these young peop...
Through sharenting, parents now shape their children¿s digital identity long before these young peop...
Despite being worried that children may compromise their privacy by disclosing too much personal dat...
Sharenting – a new term emerged over the past 10 years – refers to the practice of sharing textual a...
The present article reports on findings from a survey administered in (country anonymised)...
“Sharenting” is an internet trend in which parents report detailed information or repeatedly post pi...
Debates about the risks of sharenting (the practice of parents or guardians sharing information abou...
Debates about the risks of sharenting (the practice of parents or guardians sharing information abou...
Sharenting has become closely intertwined with common parenting practices. The term is produced from...
Sharenting has become closely intertwined with common parenting practices. The term is produced from...
Despite being worried that children may compromise their privacy by disclosing too much personal dat...
Despite being worried that children may compromise their privacy by disclosing too much personal dat...
Sharenting (using social media to share content about one’s child) is a progressively common phenome...
This paper presents a theoretical analysis of the concept of sharenting, emphasizing its role in vi...
Through sharenting, or online sharing about parenting, parents now shape their children’s digital id...
Through sharenting, parents now shape their children¿s digital identity long before these young peop...
Through sharenting, parents now shape their children¿s digital identity long before these young peop...
Despite being worried that children may compromise their privacy by disclosing too much personal dat...
Sharenting – a new term emerged over the past 10 years – refers to the practice of sharing textual a...
The present article reports on findings from a survey administered in (country anonymised)...
“Sharenting” is an internet trend in which parents report detailed information or repeatedly post pi...
Debates about the risks of sharenting (the practice of parents or guardians sharing information abou...
Debates about the risks of sharenting (the practice of parents or guardians sharing information abou...
Sharenting has become closely intertwined with common parenting practices. The term is produced from...
Sharenting has become closely intertwined with common parenting practices. The term is produced from...
Despite being worried that children may compromise their privacy by disclosing too much personal dat...
Despite being worried that children may compromise their privacy by disclosing too much personal dat...
Sharenting (using social media to share content about one’s child) is a progressively common phenome...
This paper presents a theoretical analysis of the concept of sharenting, emphasizing its role in vi...
Through sharenting, or online sharing about parenting, parents now shape their children’s digital id...
Through sharenting, parents now shape their children¿s digital identity long before these young peop...
Through sharenting, parents now shape their children¿s digital identity long before these young peop...
Despite being worried that children may compromise their privacy by disclosing too much personal dat...