This article examines the appropriation of social media as platforms of alternative journalism by the protestors of the 2010 G20 summit in Toronto, Canada. The Toronto Community Mobilization Network, the network that coordinated the protests, urged participants to broadcast news using Twitter, YouTube, and Flickr. This particular use of social media is studied in the light of the history and theory of alternative journalism. Analyzing a set of 11,556 tweets, 222 videos, and 3,338 photos, the article assesses user participation in social media protest reporting, as well as the resulting protest accounts. The findings suggest that social media did not facilitate the crowd-sourcing of alternative reporting, except to some extent for Twitter. A...
Based on 17 in-depth interviews with people involved in the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) movement, we pr...
Much has been written in recent years about the growing impact of social media on social movements. ...
The article argues that contemporary protest movements are facing a convergence of what has traditio...
This article explores how Twitter has emerged as a signifier of contemporary protest. Using the conc...
The Twitter Revolutions of 2009 reinvigorated the question of whether new social media have any real...
This article aims to shed more light on the potentials and limitations of social media as a tool for...
In 2014, Hong Kong witnessed the rise of a significant social movement, known as the Umbrella Moveme...
The confluence of activism and social media - legitimized by efforts such as the Arab Spring and Occ...
The extensive use of social media for protest purposes was a distinctive feature of the recent prote...
This article explores how Twitter has emerged as a signifier of contemporary protest. Using the conc...
This article probes the catalytic features of social media in civic participation and mass civil dis...
© 2016 Dr. Aleksandar DeejayProtest movements have traditionally strategized tactics for “appeal” th...
The emergence of the internet and varied social media networks have led to the transformation of how...
This article intends to contribute to the debate on whether Twitter can be a complementary tool or a...
[Extract] New media practices aided through social media have made a lot of academics and theorists ...
Based on 17 in-depth interviews with people involved in the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) movement, we pr...
Much has been written in recent years about the growing impact of social media on social movements. ...
The article argues that contemporary protest movements are facing a convergence of what has traditio...
This article explores how Twitter has emerged as a signifier of contemporary protest. Using the conc...
The Twitter Revolutions of 2009 reinvigorated the question of whether new social media have any real...
This article aims to shed more light on the potentials and limitations of social media as a tool for...
In 2014, Hong Kong witnessed the rise of a significant social movement, known as the Umbrella Moveme...
The confluence of activism and social media - legitimized by efforts such as the Arab Spring and Occ...
The extensive use of social media for protest purposes was a distinctive feature of the recent prote...
This article explores how Twitter has emerged as a signifier of contemporary protest. Using the conc...
This article probes the catalytic features of social media in civic participation and mass civil dis...
© 2016 Dr. Aleksandar DeejayProtest movements have traditionally strategized tactics for “appeal” th...
The emergence of the internet and varied social media networks have led to the transformation of how...
This article intends to contribute to the debate on whether Twitter can be a complementary tool or a...
[Extract] New media practices aided through social media have made a lot of academics and theorists ...
Based on 17 in-depth interviews with people involved in the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) movement, we pr...
Much has been written in recent years about the growing impact of social media on social movements. ...
The article argues that contemporary protest movements are facing a convergence of what has traditio...