Результаты исследований: Публикации в книгах, отчётах, сборниках, трудах конференций › статья в сборнике материалов конференции › научная › Рецензирование
Political actors in Russian Twitter : Patterns of blaming and responsibility in Twitter discussions on conflicts with post-Soviet immigrants. / Bodrunova, Svetlana S.; Smolyarova, Anna S.; Blekanov, Ivan S.
eGose 2017 - 2017 International Conference on Electronic Governance and Open Society: Challenges in Eurasia, Proceedings. Том F130282 Association for Computing Machinery, 2017. стр. 40-47 (ACM International Conference Proceeding Series; Том Part F130282).Результаты исследований: Публикации в книгах, отчётах, сборниках, трудах конференций › статья в сборнике материалов конференции › научная › Рецензирование
}
TY - GEN
T1 - Political actors in Russian Twitter
T2 - 2017 International Conference on Electronic Governance and Open Society, eGose 2017
AU - Bodrunova, Svetlana S.
AU - Smolyarova, Anna S.
AU - Blekanov, Ivan S.
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2017 Association for Computing Machinery.
PY - 2017/9/4
Y1 - 2017/9/4
N2 - Online communication platforms have rapidly become a substantial element of e-governance processes in Europe and beyond. Today, research has shown that, in cases of social unrest and/or emergency, political actors responsible for their resolution are able to efficiently use microblogging platforms (including Twitter) to promote the discourse of harmonization. But in today's Russia, where the growth of inter-ethnic conflicts between the re-settlers from the post-Soviet South (Central Asia and South Caucasus) and the host communities in cities and towns has coincided with the growth of online communication milieus and their radicalization, political actors as well as NGOs seem to play minor roles in online communication management, including the cases of social unrest. We explore two Twitter discussions on inter-ethnic conflicts in Moscow to describe the presence of political actors, their roles in conflict resolution, and the patterns of expectations of other users towards the politicians. We discover extremely low political participation, as well as the phenomenon of 'radical replacement' of the roles of political emergency managers by nationalist users.
AB - Online communication platforms have rapidly become a substantial element of e-governance processes in Europe and beyond. Today, research has shown that, in cases of social unrest and/or emergency, political actors responsible for their resolution are able to efficiently use microblogging platforms (including Twitter) to promote the discourse of harmonization. But in today's Russia, where the growth of inter-ethnic conflicts between the re-settlers from the post-Soviet South (Central Asia and South Caucasus) and the host communities in cities and towns has coincided with the growth of online communication milieus and their radicalization, political actors as well as NGOs seem to play minor roles in online communication management, including the cases of social unrest. We explore two Twitter discussions on inter-ethnic conflicts in Moscow to describe the presence of political actors, their roles in conflict resolution, and the patterns of expectations of other users towards the politicians. We discover extremely low political participation, as well as the phenomenon of 'radical replacement' of the roles of political emergency managers by nationalist users.
KW - Inter-ethnic conflict
KW - Patterns of blaming
KW - Political actors
KW - Twitter
KW - Web crawling
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85030087892&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1145/3129757.3129766
DO - 10.1145/3129757.3129766
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85030087892
VL - F130282
T3 - ACM International Conference Proceeding Series
SP - 40
EP - 47
BT - eGose 2017 - 2017 International Conference on Electronic Governance and Open Society
PB - Association for Computing Machinery
Y2 - 4 September 2017 through 6 September 2017
ER -
ID: 9215659