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Media of Contention: The Triggers of Protest Mobilization in Web-Based Social Networks. / Sherstobitov, Aleksandr; Sedneva, Karina.

Proceedings of the International Conference on Internet and Modern Society, IMS 2017. Том Part F133135 Association for Computing Machinery, 2017. стр. 206-211.

Результаты исследований: Публикации в книгах, отчётах, сборниках, трудах конференцийстатья в сборнике материалов конференциинаучнаяРецензирование

Harvard

Sherstobitov, A & Sedneva, K 2017, Media of Contention: The Triggers of Protest Mobilization in Web-Based Social Networks. в Proceedings of the International Conference on Internet and Modern Society, IMS 2017. Том. Part F133135, Association for Computing Machinery, стр. 206-211, XX Международная объединенная научная конференция «Интернет и современное общество», Санкт-Петербург, Российская Федерация, 21/06/17. https://doi.org/10.1145/3143699.3143704

APA

Sherstobitov, A., & Sedneva, K. (2017). Media of Contention: The Triggers of Protest Mobilization in Web-Based Social Networks. в Proceedings of the International Conference on Internet and Modern Society, IMS 2017 (Том Part F133135, стр. 206-211). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3143699.3143704

Vancouver

Sherstobitov A, Sedneva K. Media of Contention: The Triggers of Protest Mobilization in Web-Based Social Networks. в Proceedings of the International Conference on Internet and Modern Society, IMS 2017. Том Part F133135. Association for Computing Machinery. 2017. стр. 206-211 https://doi.org/10.1145/3143699.3143704

Author

Sherstobitov, Aleksandr ; Sedneva, Karina. / Media of Contention: The Triggers of Protest Mobilization in Web-Based Social Networks. Proceedings of the International Conference on Internet and Modern Society, IMS 2017. Том Part F133135 Association for Computing Machinery, 2017. стр. 206-211

BibTeX

@inproceedings{b06b2c27a21248528330b7e9198078d3,
title = "Media of Contention: The Triggers of Protest Mobilization in Web-Based Social Networks",
abstract = "Conflict political events such as “Arab Spring”, “Occupy” actions, Russian political protests during the electoral cycle of 2011-2012 show that social networks become increasingly important in contemporary political process in a broader context. Digital media are used by range of political actors as arenas for mobilization of the real-world political action. However most of the recent research in this area use quantitative analysis with panel or cross-sectional data. This is quite reasonable as modern technologies give social scientists the opportunity to collect and process big data, but at the same time such research strategies lead to methodological trap. In this paper we argue that more case-studies focusing on the micro-level activity may provide us with the comprehensive understanding of the exact linkages between communication in social media and people{\textquoteright}s actions in real world. We assume that process tracing tools may enrich the explanatory power of media and political studies in this area as it will upgrade inferential leverage that is often lacking in quantitative approach. In order to test process tracing method we focus on two conflict events that occurred in different institutional, media and cultural settings. These are Biryulevo bashing in October 2013 (Moscow, Russian Federation) and Ferguson unrest in August – December 2014 (Missouri, USA). While testing the method we are focusing on the online mobilization techniques and triggers that shape offline protest actions. Our key findings prove the idea that latent societal contention is the key factor for intense conflict discussion in the social media, and thus it triggers the offline actions very quickly.",
keywords = "Communication, Comparative Perspective, Conflict, Protest Mobilization, Social Media",
author = "Aleksandr Sherstobitov and Karina Sedneva",
year = "2017",
month = jun,
day = "21",
doi = "10.1145/3143699.3143704",
language = "English",
volume = "Part F133135",
pages = "206--211",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the International Conference on Internet and Modern Society, IMS 2017",
publisher = "Association for Computing Machinery",
address = "United States",
note = "2017 International Conference on Internet and Modern Society, IMS 2017, IMS 2017 ; Conference date: 21-06-2017 Through 23-06-2017",
url = "http://icims.ifmo.ru/, http://ims.ifmo.ru/ru/pages/28/IMS_2017.htm",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Media of Contention: The Triggers of Protest Mobilization in Web-Based Social Networks

AU - Sherstobitov, Aleksandr

AU - Sedneva, Karina

N1 - Conference code: XX

PY - 2017/6/21

Y1 - 2017/6/21

N2 - Conflict political events such as “Arab Spring”, “Occupy” actions, Russian political protests during the electoral cycle of 2011-2012 show that social networks become increasingly important in contemporary political process in a broader context. Digital media are used by range of political actors as arenas for mobilization of the real-world political action. However most of the recent research in this area use quantitative analysis with panel or cross-sectional data. This is quite reasonable as modern technologies give social scientists the opportunity to collect and process big data, but at the same time such research strategies lead to methodological trap. In this paper we argue that more case-studies focusing on the micro-level activity may provide us with the comprehensive understanding of the exact linkages between communication in social media and people’s actions in real world. We assume that process tracing tools may enrich the explanatory power of media and political studies in this area as it will upgrade inferential leverage that is often lacking in quantitative approach. In order to test process tracing method we focus on two conflict events that occurred in different institutional, media and cultural settings. These are Biryulevo bashing in October 2013 (Moscow, Russian Federation) and Ferguson unrest in August – December 2014 (Missouri, USA). While testing the method we are focusing on the online mobilization techniques and triggers that shape offline protest actions. Our key findings prove the idea that latent societal contention is the key factor for intense conflict discussion in the social media, and thus it triggers the offline actions very quickly.

AB - Conflict political events such as “Arab Spring”, “Occupy” actions, Russian political protests during the electoral cycle of 2011-2012 show that social networks become increasingly important in contemporary political process in a broader context. Digital media are used by range of political actors as arenas for mobilization of the real-world political action. However most of the recent research in this area use quantitative analysis with panel or cross-sectional data. This is quite reasonable as modern technologies give social scientists the opportunity to collect and process big data, but at the same time such research strategies lead to methodological trap. In this paper we argue that more case-studies focusing on the micro-level activity may provide us with the comprehensive understanding of the exact linkages between communication in social media and people’s actions in real world. We assume that process tracing tools may enrich the explanatory power of media and political studies in this area as it will upgrade inferential leverage that is often lacking in quantitative approach. In order to test process tracing method we focus on two conflict events that occurred in different institutional, media and cultural settings. These are Biryulevo bashing in October 2013 (Moscow, Russian Federation) and Ferguson unrest in August – December 2014 (Missouri, USA). While testing the method we are focusing on the online mobilization techniques and triggers that shape offline protest actions. Our key findings prove the idea that latent societal contention is the key factor for intense conflict discussion in the social media, and thus it triggers the offline actions very quickly.

KW - Communication

KW - Comparative Perspective

KW - Conflict

KW - Protest Mobilization

KW - Social Media

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85040722632&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1145/3143699.3143704

DO - 10.1145/3143699.3143704

M3 - Conference contribution

AN - SCOPUS:85040722632

VL - Part F133135

SP - 206

EP - 211

BT - Proceedings of the International Conference on Internet and Modern Society, IMS 2017

PB - Association for Computing Machinery

T2 - 2017 International Conference on Internet and Modern Society, IMS 2017

Y2 - 21 June 2017 through 23 June 2017

ER -

ID: 13386486