15,284
Views
394
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Articles

Protest in an Information Society: a review of literature on social movements and new ICTs

Pages 202-224 | Published online: 17 Feb 2007

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (87)

Kristin Eichhorn & Eric Linhart. (2023) Election-related internet-shutdowns in autocracies and hybrid regimes. Journal of Elections, Public Opinion and Parties 33:4, pages 705-725.
Read now
Stevanus Wisnu Wijaya, Jason Watson & Christine Bruce. (2023) A virtual ethnography study of Indonesian migrant domestic workers’ empowerment in online communities. Behaviour & Information Technology 42:7, pages 921-939.
Read now
Ricki Ginsberg, Jessica Barbata Jackson & Lauren Midgette. (2023) Learning from College Students’ Engagement in Collective Action: Divergent Values and Implementation. College Teaching 0:0, pages 1-14.
Read now
Tamar Haruna Dambo, Metin Ersoy, Ahmad Muhammad Auwal, Victor Oluwafemi Olorunsola & Mehmet Bahri Saydam. (2022) Office of the citizen: a qualitative analysis of Twitter activity during the Lekki shooting in Nigeria’s #EndSARS protests. Information, Communication & Society 25:15, pages 2246-2263.
Read now
Kathleen M. Fallon & Sophia Boutilier. (2022) The digital divide within the women’s movement in Ghana: Implications for voice and inclusion. Social Movement Studies 21:5, pages 677-696.
Read now
Jian Xiao & Isabel Fangyi Lu. (2022) Art as intervention: Protests on urban transformation in China and Australia. Journal of Urban Affairs 44:4-5, pages 504-523.
Read now
Maha Bashri & Nazar Zaki. (2021) #Allhandsondeck Shaun King and unite the right rally: mobilization and the networked social journalist. Atlantic Journal of Communication 29:5, pages 292-311.
Read now
Divya Siddarth, Roshan Shankar & Joyojeet Pal. (2021) ‘We do politics so we can change politics’: communication strategies and practices in the Aam Aadmi Party’s institutionalization process. Information, Communication & Society 24:10, pages 1361-1381.
Read now
Madelyn Rose Sanfilippo & Katherine J. Strandburg. (2021) Privacy governing knowledge in public Facebook groups for political activism. Information, Communication & Society 24:7, pages 960-977.
Read now
Florence Namasinga Selnes. (2021) Internet restrictions in Uganda: examining their impact on journalism. Information, Communication & Society 24:3, pages 490-506.
Read now
Hadi Sohrabi. (2021) New Media, Contentious Politics, and Political Public Sphere in Iran. Critical Arts 35:1, pages 35-48.
Read now
Raul Nunes. (2020) Outlining the history of cyberactivism in Brazil. Internet Histories 4:3, pages 287-303.
Read now
Bonno Pel, Julia Wittmayer, Jens Dorland & Michael Søgaard Jørgensen. (2020) Unpacking the social innovation ecosystem: an empirically grounded typology of empowering network constellations. Innovation: The European Journal of Social Science Research 33:3, pages 311-336.
Read now
Tenford Chitanana. (2020) From Kubatana to #ThisFlag: Trajectories of digital activism in Zimbabwe. Journal of Information Technology & Politics 17:2, pages 130-145.
Read now
Anna Slavina & Robert Brym. (2020) Demonstrating in the internet age: a test of Castells’ theory. Social Movement Studies 19:2, pages 201-221.
Read now
Yossi David & Christian Baden. (2020) Reframing community boundaries: the erosive power of new media spaces in authoritarian societies. Information, Communication & Society 23:1, pages 110-127.
Read now
Magdalena Karolak. (2020) Social media in democratic transitions and consolidations: what can we learn from the case of Tunisia?. The Journal of North African Studies 25:1, pages 8-33.
Read now
Vlad P. Glaveanu, Ingunn Johanne Ness & Constance de Saint Laurent. (2020) Creativity, Learning and Technology: Opportunities, Challenges and New Horizons. Creativity Research Journal 32:1, pages 1-3.
Read now
Kate Hunt. (2019) Twitter, social movements, and claiming allies in abortion debates. Journal of Information Technology & Politics 16:4, pages 394-410.
Read now
Ayşenur Benevento & Mukadder Okuyan. (2019) Significance of protesters’ words during Gezi Park protests: finding implicit meanings in sticky notes and tweets. Social Movement Studies 18:4, pages 482-498.
Read now
Mark Daniel Jaeger & Myriam Dunn Cavelty. (2019) From madness to wisdom: intelligence and the digital crowd. Intelligence and National Security 34:3, pages 329-343.
Read now
Udo Pesch, Wouter Spekkink & Jaco Quist. (2019) Local sustainability initiatives: innovation and civic engagement in societal experiments. European Planning Studies 27:2, pages 300-317.
Read now
Kjerstin Thorson, Yu Xu & Stephanie Edgerly. (2018) Political Inequalities Start at Home: Parents, Children, and the Socialization of Civic Infrastructure Online. Political Communication 35:2, pages 178-195.
Read now
Morris Kalliny, Salma Ghanem & Mary Kalliny. (2018) The Impact of Advertising and Media on the Arab Culture: The Case of the Arab Spring, Public Spheres, and Social Media. Journal of Political Marketing 17:1, pages 62-89.
Read now
Lena Surzhko-Harned & Andrew J. Zahuranec. (2017) Framing the revolution: the role of social media in Ukraine’s Euromaidan movement. Nationalities Papers 45:5, pages 758-779.
Read now
Andreas Møller Jørgensen. (2017) Kunuk took it to the streets of Greenland: single-issue protests in a young online democracy. Information, Communication & Society 20:8, pages 1204-1219.
Read now
Rebecca A. Clothey & Emmanuel F. Koku. (2017) Oppositional consciousness, cultural preservation, and everyday resistance on the Uyghur Internet. Asian Ethnicity 18:3, pages 351-370.
Read now
Angus Bancroft & Peter Scott Reid. (2017) Challenging the techno-politics of anonymity: the case of cryptomarket users. Information, Communication & Society 20:4, pages 497-512.
Read now
Stavroula Chrona & Cristiano Bee. (2017) Right to public space and right to democracy: The role of social media in Gezi Park. Research and Policy on Turkey 2:1, pages 49-61.
Read now
Shin Haeng Lee. (2017) Digital democracy in Asia: The impact of the Asian internet on political participation. Journal of Information Technology & Politics 14:1, pages 62-82.
Read now
Ronggui Huang & Xiaoyi Sun. (2016) Dynamic preference revelation and expression of personal frames: how Weibo is used in an anti-nuclear protest in China. Chinese Journal of Communication 9:4, pages 385-402.
Read now
Lijun Tang, Desai Shan & Peidong Yang. (2016) Workers’ rights defence on China's internet: an analysis of actors. Information, Communication & Society 19:8, pages 1171-1186.
Read now
Lorenzo Mosca & Mario Quaranta. (2016) News diets, social media use and non-institutional participation in three communication ecologies: comparing Germany, Italy and the UK. Information, Communication & Society 19:3, pages 325-345.
Read now
Heather E. Hodges & Galen Stocking. (2016) A pipeline of tweets: environmental movements’ use of Twitter in response to the Keystone XL pipeline. Environmental Politics 25:2, pages 223-247.
Read now
Alexia Maddox, Monica J. Barratt, Matthew Allen & Simon Lenton. (2016) Constructive activism in the dark web: cryptomarkets and illicit drugs in the digital ‘demimonde’. Information, Communication & Society 19:1, pages 111-126.
Read now
Olga Onuch. (2015) EuroMaidan Protests in Ukraine: Social Media Versus Social Networks. Problems of Post-Communism 62:4, pages 217-235.
Read now
Fanxu Zeng & Yu Huang. (2015) The media and urban contention in China: a co-empowerment model. Chinese Journal of Communication 8:3, pages 233-252.
Read now
Deana A. Rohlinger & Leslie A. Bunnage. (2015) Connecting people to politics over time? Internet communication technology and retention in MoveOn.org and the Florida Tea Party Movement. Information, Communication & Society 18:5, pages 539-552.
Read now
Ronggui Huang & Xiaoyi Sun. (2015) Issues and place: the hyperlink network of homeowner forums and implications for collective action. Chinese Journal of Communication 8:2, pages 119-141.
Read now
Merav Katz-Kimchi & Idit Manosevitch. (2015) Mobilizing Facebook Users against Facebook's Energy Policy: The Case of Greenpeace Unfriend Coal Campaign. Environmental Communication 9:2, pages 248-267.
Read now
Maggie Boyraz, Aparna Krishnan & Danielle Catona. (2015) Who Is Retweeted in Times of Political Protest? An Analysis of Characteristics of Top Tweeters and Top Retweeted Users During the 2011 Egyptian Revolution. Atlantic Journal of Communication 23:2, pages 99-119.
Read now
Adrian U. Ang, Shlomi Dinar & Russell E. Lucas. (2014) Protests by the young and digitally restless: the means, motives, and opportunities of anti-government demonstrations. Information, Communication & Society 17:10, pages 1228-1249.
Read now
Benjamin H. Detenber, Mark Cenite, Shuhua Zhou, Shelly Malik & Rachel L. Neo. (2014) Rights Versus Morality: Online Debate About Decriminalization of Gay Sex in Singapore. Journal of Homosexuality 61:9, pages 1313-1333.
Read now
Josep-Lluís Micó & Andreu Casero-Ripollés. (2014) Political activism online: organization and media relations in the case of 15M in Spain. Information, Communication & Society 17:7, pages 858-871.
Read now
Eva Anduiza, Camilo Cristancho & José M. Sabucedo. (2014) Mobilization through online social networks: the political protest of the indignados in Spain. Information, Communication & Society 17:6, pages 750-764.
Read now
Maria Bondes & Günter Schucher. (2014) Derailed emotions: The transformation of claims and targets during the Wenzhou online incident. Information, Communication & Society 17:1, pages 45-65.
Read now
Ronggui Huang & Xiaoyi Sun. (2014) Weibo network, information diffusion and implications for collective action in China. Information, Communication & Society 17:1, pages 86-104.
Read now
Argyro P. Karanasiou. (2014) The changing face of protests in the digital age: on occupying cyberspace and Distributed-Denial-of-Services (DDoS) attacks. International Review of Law, Computers & Technology 28:1, pages 98-113.
Read now
Jennifer Earl, Heather McKee Hurwitz, Analicia Mejia Mesinas, Margaret Tolan & Ashley Arlotti. (2013) THIS PROTEST WILL BE TWEETED. Information, Communication & Society 16:4, pages 459-478.
Read now
MaximillianT. Hänska-Ahy & Roxanna Shapour. (2013) WHO'S REPORTING THE PROTESTS?. Journalism Studies 14:1, pages 29-45.
Read now
Yannis Theocharis. (2013) The Wealth of (Occupation) Networks? Communication Patterns and Information Distribution in a Twitter Protest Network. Journal of Information Technology & Politics 10:1, pages 35-56.
Read now
Ronggui Huang & Ngai-ming Yip. (2012) Internet and Activism in Urban China: A Case Study of Protests in Xiamen and Panyu. Journal of Comparative Asian Development 11:2, pages 201-223.
Read now
Frances Shaw. (2012) ‘HOTTEST 100 WOMEN’. Australian Feminist Studies 27:74, pages 373-387.
Read now
Qian Xu, Mike Schmierbach, Saraswathi Bellur, Erin Ash, Anne Oeldorf-Hirsch & Andrew Kegerise. (2012) The Effects of “Friend” Characteristics on Evaluations of an Activist Group in a Social Networking Context. Mass Communication and Society 15:3, pages 432-453.
Read now
Summer Harlow & Dustin Harp. (2012) COLLECTIVE ACTION ON THE WEB. Information, Communication & Society 15:2, pages 196-216.
Read now
Axel Maireder & Christian Schwarzenegger. (2012) A MOVEMENT OF CONNECTED INDIVIDUALS. Information, Communication & Society 15:2, pages 171-195.
Read now
Joachim Åström, Mikael Granberg & Abdul Khakee. (2011) Apple Pie–Spinach Metaphor: Shall e-Democracy make Participatory Planning More Wholesome?. Planning Practice & Research 26:5, pages 571-586.
Read now
Philip N. Howard, Sheetal D. Agarwal & Muzammil M. Hussain. (2011) When Do States Disconnect Their Digital Networks? Regime Responses to the Political Uses of Social Media. The Communication Review 14:3, pages 216-232.
Read now
Victor Bekkers, Henri Beunders, Arthur Edwards & Rebecca Moody. (2011) New Media, Micromobilization, and Political Agenda Setting: Crossover Effects in Political Mobilization and Media Usage. The Information Society 27:4, pages 209-219.
Read now
Melissa K. Merry. (2011) Interest Group Activism on the Web: The Case of Environmental Organizations. Journal of Information Technology & Politics 8:1, pages 110-128.
Read now
Jeroen Van Laer & Peter Van Aelst. (2010) INTERNET AND SOCIAL MOVEMENT ACTION REPERTOIRES. Information, Communication & Society 13:8, pages 1146-1171.
Read now
Anne-Marie Oostveen. (2010) CITIZENS AND ACTIVISTS. Information, Communication & Society 13:6, pages 793-819.
Read now
Carol S. Lomicky & Nanette M. Hogg. (2010) COMPUTER-MEDIATED COMMUNICATION AND PROTEST. Information, Communication & Society 13:5, pages 674-695.
Read now
Dana R. Fisher & Marije Boekkooi. (2010) MOBILIZING FRIENDS AND STRANGERS. Information, Communication & Society 13:2, pages 193-208.
Read now
Tapio Häyhtiö & Jarmo Rinne. (2009) LITTLE BROTHERS AND SISTERS ARE WATCHING. Information, Communication & Society 12:6, pages 840-859.
Read now
Rasmus Kleis Nielsen. (2009) The Labors of Internet-Assisted Activism: Overcommunication, Miscommunication, and Communicative Overload. Journal of Information Technology & Politics 6:3-4, pages 267-280.
Read now
Niall Ó Dochartaigh. (2009) REFRAMING ONLINE: ULSTER LOYALISTS IMAGINE AN AMERICAN AUDIENCE. Identities 16:1, pages 102-127.
Read now
Linda Brennan & Wayne Binney. (2008) Concepts in Conflict: Social Marketing and Sustainability. Journal of Nonprofit & Public Sector Marketing 20:2, pages 261-281.
Read now
Marcia McKenzie. (2008) The places of pedagogy: or, what we can do with culture through intersubjective experiences. Environmental Education Research 14:3, pages 361-373.
Read now
Tapio Häyhtiö & Jarmo Rinne. (2007) Hard Rock Hallelujah! Empowering Reflexive Political Action on the Internet. Journal for Cultural Research 11:4, pages 337-358.
Read now

Articles from other publishers (307)

Victoria Carty. 2007. The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Sociology. The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Sociology 1 3 .
Lijun Tang. (2023) Chinese seafarers’ use of the Internet and social media to promote labor rights. Asian and Pacific Migration Journal.
Crossref
Pablo Jost & Leyla Dogruel. (2023) Radical Mobilization in Times of Crisis: Use and Effects of Appeals and Populist Communication Features in Telegram Channels. Social Media + Society 9:3.
Crossref
Gianfranco Polizzi. (2021) Internet users’ utopian/dystopian imaginaries of society in the digital age: Theorizing critical digital literacy and civic engagement. New Media & Society 25:6, pages 1205-1226.
Crossref
Stephen Prochaska, Kayla Duskin, Zarine Kharazian, Carly Minow, Stephanie Blucker, Sylvie Venuto, Jevin D. West & Kate Starbird. (2023) Mobilizing Manufactured Reality: How Participatory Disinformation Shaped Deep Stories to Catalyze Action during the 2020 U.S. Presidential Election. Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction 7:CSCW1, pages 1-39.
Crossref
Olga Onuch, Gwendolyn Sasse & Sébastien Michiels. (2023) Flowers, Tractors, & Telegram: Who are the Protesters in Belarus?: A Survey Based Assessment of Anti-Lukashenka Protest Participants. Nationalities Papers, pages 1-26.
Crossref
Enock Ndawana. (2023) The Potential Role of Social Media in Peacebuilding in Zimbabwe. Journal of Peacebuilding & Development 18:1, pages 53-67.
Crossref
Melanie Kwestel & Marya L. Doerfel. (2023) Emergent stakeholders: Using multi-stakeholder issue networks to gain legitimacy in corporate networks. Public Relations Review 49:1, pages 102272.
Crossref
Shuang Ling. (2023) What Drive People to Successfully Protest China’s Environmental Project in Social Media Era? A Fuzzy-Set Qualitative Comparative Analysis. Chinese Political Science Review.
Crossref
Azi Lev-On. (2023) “Objection, Your Honor”: Use of Social Media by Civilians to Challenge the Criminal Justice System. SSRN Electronic Journal.
Crossref
Oxana Onilov. 2023. Different Global Journalisms. Different Global Journalisms 127 154 .
Danny Fitzpatrick & Paddy Hoey. (2022) From fanzines to foodbanks: Football fan activism in the age of anti-politics. International Review for the Sociology of Sport 57:8, pages 1234-1252.
Crossref
Hao Cao. (2022) Articulative labor in assembling protest networks in the disjointed WeChatsphere: Rethinking human and non-human agency in digitally mediated activism. Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies 28:5, pages 1476-1493.
Crossref
Victoria Carty. 2013. The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Social and Political Movements. The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Social and Political Movements 1 4 .
Pedro Pereira Neto & Mariana Serra Santos. 2022. Research Anthology on Social Media's Influence on Government, Politics, and Social Movements. Research Anthology on Social Media's Influence on Government, Politics, and Social Movements 167 184 .
Sheldondra J. Brown, Grace M. Babcock & Monica Bixby Radu. 2022. Research Anthology on Social Media's Influence on Government, Politics, and Social Movements. Research Anthology on Social Media's Influence on Government, Politics, and Social Movements 50 60 .
Sebastian Aravena Ortiz & Pamela Gatica-Ramírez. (2022) El rol de la perigrafía en la comunicación visual medioambiental. Revista FAMECOS 29:1, pages e43260.
Crossref
Monika Kirner-Ludwig. 2022. The Pragmatics of Internet Memes. The Pragmatics of Internet Memes 145 181 .
Meesha Gupta & Asif Ali Syed. (2021) Impact of online social media activities on marketing of green products. International Journal of Organizational Analysis 30:3, pages 679-698.
Crossref
Lauren Kogen. (2022) From Statistics to Stories: Indices and Indicators as Communication Tools for Social Change. The International Journal of Press/Politics, pages 194016122210942.
Crossref
Aleksy Kwilinski, Nataliya Dalevska & Vyacheslav V. Dementyev. (2022) Metatheoretical Issues of the Evolution of the International Political Economy. Journal of Risk and Financial Management 15:3, pages 124.
Crossref
Lauren B McInroy & Oliver WJ Beer. (2020) Wands up! Internet-mediated social advocacy organizations and youth-oriented connective action. New Media & Society 24:3, pages 724-740.
Crossref
Kenneth C. C. Yang & Yowei Kang. 2022. Research Anthology on Citizen Engagement and Activism for Social Change. Research Anthology on Citizen Engagement and Activism for Social Change 307 330 .
Juan Pablo Luna, Sergio Toro & Sebastián Valenzuela. (2022) Amplifying Counter-Public Spheres on Social Media: News Sharing of Alternative Versus Traditional Media After the 2019 Chilean Uprising. Social Media + Society 8:1, pages 205630512210773.
Crossref
Elena V. Brodovskaya, Vladimir A. Lukushin & Maria A. Davydova. 2022. Electronic Governance and Open Society: Challenges in Eurasia. Electronic Governance and Open Society: Challenges in Eurasia 132 144 .
Ziaul Haque, Joseph G. Bock & Hogr Tarkhani. 2022. The Palgrave Handbook of Global Social Change. The Palgrave Handbook of Global Social Change 1 18 .
Serap Akfırat, Mete Sefa Uysal, Fatih Bayrak, Tolga Ergiyen, Emir Üzümçeker, Taylan Yurtbakan & Özlem Serap Özkan. (2021) Social identification and collective action participation in the internet age: A meta-analysis. Cyberpsychology: Journal of Psychosocial Research on Cyberspace 15:4.
Crossref
Maximilian Heimstädt & Leonhard Dobusch. (2021) Riskante Retweets: „Predictive Risk Intelligence“ und Interessenvertretung in globalen Wertschöpfungsnetzwerken. Industrielle Beziehungen. Zeitschrift für Arbeit, Organisation und Management 28:2, pages 194-211.
Crossref
Benjamin Herr, Philip Schörpf & Jörg Flecker. (2021) Virtuelle Kommunikationsräume als Ausgangspunkt für Interessenartikulation in der Onlineplattformarbeit. Industrielle Beziehungen. Zeitschrift für Arbeit, Organisation und Management 28:2, pages 172-193.
Crossref
Jaclyn Piatak & Ian Mikkelsen. (2021) Does Social Media Engagement Translate to Civic Engagement Offline?. Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly 50:5, pages 1079-1101.
Crossref
Samara Klar & Alexandra McCoy. (2021) Partisan‐Motivated Evaluations of Sexual Misconduct and the Mitigating Role of the #MeToo Movement. American Journal of Political Science 65:4, pages 777-789.
Crossref
Akosua K. Darkwah. 2021. Producing Inclusive Feminist Knowledge: Positionalities and Discourses in the Global South. Producing Inclusive Feminist Knowledge: Positionalities and Discourses in the Global South 147 165 .
Monideepa Tarafdar & Deepa Kajal Ray. (2021) Role of Social Media in Social Protest Cycles: A Sociomaterial Examination. Information Systems Research 32:3, pages 1066-1090.
Crossref
Julio Rodríguez-Suárez, Lorena Morán-Neches & Juan-Bautista Herrero-Olaizola. (2021) Online research, new languages and symbolism of digital activism: A systematic review. Comunicar 29:68, pages 47-58.
Crossref
Yevgeniya Li, Jean-Grégoire Bernard & Markus Luczak-Roesch. (2021) Beyond Clicktivism: What Makes Digitally Native Activism Effective? An Exploration of the Sleeping Giants Movement. Social Media + Society 7:3, pages 205630512110353.
Crossref
Hannah Fasnacht. (2021) The Narrative Aesthetics of Protest Images. JOLMA:1.
Crossref
Muhammad Rifki Shihab, Achmad Nizar Hidayanto & Panca Hadi Putra. (2021) Exploring the Effects of Normative Beliefs toward Citizen Engagement on eParticipation Technologies. Information 12:5, pages 189.
Crossref
Aaron Mueller, Zach Wood-Doughty, Silvio Amir, Mark Dredze & Alicia Lynn Nobles. (2021) Demographic Representation and Collective Storytelling in the Me Too Twitter Hashtag Activism Movement. Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction 5:CSCW1, pages 1-28.
Crossref
Olga Onuch, Emma Mateo & Julian G. Waller. (2021) Mobilization, Mass Perceptions, and (Dis)information: “New” and “Old” Media Consumption Patterns and Protest. Social Media + Society 7:2, pages 205630512199965.
Crossref
Samantha Hautea, Perry Parks, Bruno Takahashi & Jing Zeng. (2021) Showing They Care (Or Don’t): Affective Publics and Ambivalent Climate Activism on TikTok. Social Media + Society 7:2, pages 205630512110123.
Crossref
Lisa Mueller. (2021) United we stand, divided we fall? How signals of activist cohesion affect attraction to advocacy organizations. Interest Groups & Advocacy 10:1, pages 1-18.
Crossref
Serhii Fedoniuk & Anastasia Tkachuk. (2021) КОМУНІКАТИВНИЙ СКЛАДНИК СУЧАСНИХ ПРОТЕСТІВ. Міжнародні відносини, суспільні комунікації та регіональні студії:1 (9), pages 174-188.
Crossref
Dinesh Kumar J. & Arulchelvan S.. 2021. Ubiquitous Technologies for Human Development and Knowledge Management. Ubiquitous Technologies for Human Development and Knowledge Management 164 190 .
Sheldondra J. Brown, Grace M. Babcock & Monica Bixby Radu. 2021. Encyclopedia of Information Science and Technology, Fifth Edition. Encyclopedia of Information Science and Technology, Fifth Edition 1096 1105 .
Nora Kirkizh & Olessia Koltsova. (2021) Online News and Protest Participation in a Political Context: Evidence from Self-Reported Cross-Sectional Data. Social Media + Society 7:1, pages 205630512098445.
Crossref
Mashiat Mostafa. 2021. Gender Equality. Gender Equality 1268 1280 .
Britt Christensen & Jacob Groshek. (2019) Emerging media, political protests, and government repression in autocracies and democracies from 1995 to 2012. International Communication Gazette 82:8, pages 685-704.
Crossref
Shuning Lu & Luwei Rose Luqiu. (2019) Does political efficacy equally predict news engagement across countries? A multilevel analysis of the relationship among internal political efficacy, media environment and news engagement. New Media & Society 22:12, pages 2146-2165.
Crossref
Adrija Dey & Shola Olabode. 2020. Protest Technologies and Media Revolutions. Protest Technologies and Media Revolutions 177 196 .
Athina Karatzogianni, Galina Miazhevich & Anastasia Denisova. 2020. Protest Technologies and Media Revolutions. Protest Technologies and Media Revolutions 61 81 .
Monika Kirner-Ludwig. (2020) Internet memes as multilayered re-contextualization vehicles in lay-political online discourse. Internet Pragmatics 3:2, pages 283-320.
Crossref
Hao Chen, Bin Hong & Hui-Lin Zang. (2020) Pathogen Prevalence, Collectivism and Online Sadness Expression in China *: for Special Track “Covid-19 and Computational Social Psychology”. Pathogen Prevalence, Collectivism and Online Sadness Expression in China *: for Special Track “Covid-19 and Computational Social Psychology”.
Bonno Pel, Alex Haxeltine, Flor Avelino, Adina Dumitru, René Kemp, Tom Bauler, Iris Kunze, Jens Dorland, Julia Wittmayer & Michael Søgaard Jørgensen. (2020) Towards a theory of transformative social innovation: A relational framework and 12 propositions. Research Policy 49:8, pages 104080.
Crossref
Adrija Dey. (2019) Sites of Exception: Gender Violence, Digital Activism, and Nirbhaya’s Zone of Anomie in India. Violence Against Women 26:11, pages 1423-1444.
Crossref
Yu-Hao Lee & Carlin Littles. (2020) The more the merrier? The effects of system-aggregated group size information on user's efficacy and intention to participate in collective actions. Internet Research 31:1, pages 191-207.
Crossref
Killian Clarke & Korhan Kocak. (2018) Launching Revolution: Social Media and the Egyptian Uprising’s First Movers. British Journal of Political Science 50:3, pages 1025-1045.
Crossref
Azi Lev-On. (2018) The igniter and the megaphone: Perceptions of Facebook’s role in activism. Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies 26:3, pages 577-592.
Crossref
Azi Lev-On & Nili Steinfeld. (2018) “Objection, Your Honor”: Use of Social Media by Civilians to Challenge the Criminal Justice System. Social Science Computer Review 38:3, pages 315-333.
Crossref
Lorenzo Frangi, Tingting Zhang & Robert Hebdon. (2019) Tweeting and Retweeting for Fight for $15: Unions as Dinosaur Opinion Leaders?. British Journal of Industrial Relations 58:2, pages 301-335.
Crossref
Imogen Rattle, Lucie Middlemiss & James Van Alstine. (2020) “Google fracking:” The online information ecology of the English shale gas debate. Energy Research & Social Science 64, pages 101427.
Crossref
Qing Yang, Chen Zuo, Xingxing Liu, Zhichao Yang & Hui Zhou. (2020) Risk Response for Municipal Solid Waste Crisis Using Ontology-Based Reasoning. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17:9, pages 3312.
Crossref
Khairil Anam, Lala M Kolopaking & Rilus A Kinseng. (2020) The Effectiveness of Social Media Usage within Social Movement to Reject the Reclamation of the Jakarta Bay, Indonesia. Sodality: Jurnal Sosiologi Pedesaan 8:1, pages 64-81.
Crossref
Jun Liu. (2020) Information and Communication Technologies as Contentious Repertoire. European Journal of Sociology 61:1, pages 1-31.
Crossref
J. Craig Jenkins. 2020. The New Handbook of Political Sociology. The New Handbook of Political Sociology 321 352 .
Brian R. Chabowski & Saeed Samiee. (2020) The Internet and the International Management Literature: Its development and intellectual foundation. Journal of International Management 26:1, pages 100741.
Crossref
Maria Gruber, Christiane Mayer & Sabine A. Einwiller. (2020) What drives people to participate in online firestorms?. Online Information Review 44:3, pages 563-581.
Crossref
Kenneth C. C. Yang & Yowei Kang. 2020. Using New Media for Citizen Engagement and Participation. Using New Media for Citizen Engagement and Participation 256 279 .
Yuan Yuan. 2020. Using New Media for Citizen Engagement and Participation. Using New Media for Citizen Engagement and Participation 198 218 .
Kenneth C. C. Yang & Yowei Kang. 2020. Examining the Roles of IT and Social Media in Democratic Development and Social Change. Examining the Roles of IT and Social Media in Democratic Development and Social Change 156 184 .
Pedro Pereira Neto & Mariana Serra Santos. 2020. Handbook of Research on Politics in the Computer Age. Handbook of Research on Politics in the Computer Age 338 355 .
Brad McKenna. (2019) Creating convivial affordances: A study of virtual world social movements. Information Systems Journal 30:1, pages 185-214.
Crossref
Heidrun Friese. 2019. Handbuch Soziale Praktiken und Digitale Alltagswelten. Handbuch Soziale Praktiken und Digitale Alltagswelten 1 18 .
Heidrun Friese. 2020. Handbuch Soziale Praktiken und Digitale Alltagswelten. Handbuch Soziale Praktiken und Digitale Alltagswelten 3 20 .
Mashiat Mostafa. 2020. Gender Equality. Gender Equality 1 13 .
Ned Richardson-Little & Samuel Merrill. 2020. Social Movements, Cultural Memory and Digital Media. Social Movements, Cultural Memory and Digital Media 59 84 .
Samuel Merrill, Emily Keightley & Priska Daphi. 2020. Social Movements, Cultural Memory and Digital Media. Social Movements, Cultural Memory and Digital Media 1 30 .
Angus BancroftAngus Bancroft. 2020. The Darknet and Smarter Crime. The Darknet and Smarter Crime 175 196 .
Chonghyun Choi & Dongwook Kim. (2019) THE DETERMINANTS OF ANTI-GOVERNMENT PROTESTS IN ASIA. Journal of East Asian Studies 19:3, pages 315-338.
Crossref
Светлана Геннадьевна Максимова, Дарья Алексеевна Омельченко, Оксана Евгеньевна Ноянзина & Ольга Валерьевна Суртаева. (2019) ГРАЖДАНСКИЕ ПРАКТИКИ И БАЗОВЫЕ МОДЕЛИ УЧАСТИЯ НАСЕЛЕНИЯ В ОБЩЕСТВЕННОЙ ЖИЗНИ В СОВРЕМЕННОМ СИБИРСКОМ РЕГИОНЕ. Society and Security Insights 2:3, pages 13-50.
Crossref
J. Dinesh Kumar & Arulchelvan Sriram. (2019) The Role of Information and Communication Technologies in Family Dynamics. International Journal of Information Communication Technologies and Human Development 11:3, pages 1-20.
Crossref
Caterina Froio. (2019) Nosotros y los Otros. La alteridad en los sitios web de las extremas derechas en Francia.. deSignis:31, pages 241-270.
Crossref
Richard Marcy & Valerie D’Erman. (2019) The European “New Right” as Radical Social Innovation. Journal for the Study of Radicalism 13:2, pages 65-90.
Crossref
Rana Abudayyeh. (2019) Dynamic Landscapes, Emerging Territories. Architecture_MPS 15:1.
Crossref
Benjamin T. Jones & Eleonora Mattiacci. (2017) A Manifesto, in 140 Characters or Fewer: Social Media as a Tool of Rebel Diplomacy. British Journal of Political Science 49:2, pages 739-761.
Crossref
Shin Haeng Lee & King-wa Fu. (2018) INTERNET USE AND PROTEST POLITICS IN SOUTH KOREA AND TAIWAN. Journal of East Asian Studies 19:1, pages 89-109.
Crossref
Peter Slattery, Patrick Finnegan & Richard Vidgen. (2019) Creating compassion: How volunteering websites encourage prosocial behaviour. Information and Organization 29:1, pages 57-76.
Crossref
Elmie Nekmat, Karla K. Gower, Shuhua Zhou & Miriam Metzger. (2015) Connective-Collective Action on Social Media: Moderated Mediation of Cognitive Elaboration and Perceived Source Credibility on Personalness of Source. Communication Research 46:1, pages 62-87.
Crossref
Innocent Chiluwa. 2019. Advanced Methodologies and Technologies in Network Architecture, Mobile Computing, and Data Analytics. Advanced Methodologies and Technologies in Network Architecture, Mobile Computing, and Data Analytics 1102 1113 .
Kenneth C. C. Yang & Yowei Kang. 2019. Censorship, Surveillance, and Privacy. Censorship, Surveillance, and Privacy 1153 1178 .
Kenneth C. C. Yang & Yowei Kang. 2019. Censorship, Surveillance, and Privacy. Censorship, Surveillance, and Privacy 1098 1124 .
Samuel Merrill & Johan Pries. (2019) Translocalising and Relocalising Antifascist Struggles: From #KämpaShowan to #KämpaMalmö. Antipode 51:1, pages 248-270.
Crossref
Tyler G. Okimoto, Matthew J. Hornsey & Michael Wenzel. (2019) The power of grassroots expressions of remorse for promoting intergroup forgiveness. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 80, pages 39-51.
Crossref
Isak Ladegaard. (2019) Crime displacement in digital drug markets. International Journal of Drug Policy 63, pages 113-121.
Crossref
Leizhen ZangLeizhen Zang. 2019. Re-understanding of Contemporary Chinese Political Development. Re-understanding of Contemporary Chinese Political Development 141 168 .
Jun Liu. 2019. Greening China’s Urban Governance. Greening China’s Urban Governance 177 193 .
Christian Schwarzenegger. 2019. Österreichische Mediengeschichte. Österreichische Mediengeschichte 291 314 .
Yana Breindl. 2019. Netzpolitik. Netzpolitik 141 162 .
Victoria Carty & Francisco G. Reynoso Barron. 2019. The Palgrave Handbook of Social Movements, Revolution, and Social Transformation. The Palgrave Handbook of Social Movements, Revolution, and Social Transformation 373 397 .
Victor Hugo Masías, Tobias Hecking & Heinz Ulrich Hoppe. (2018) Exploring the Relationship Between Social Networking Site Usage and Participation in Protest Activities. Frontiers in Applied Mathematics and Statistics 4.
Crossref
A.D. Rowe & D.E. Pitfield. (2018) The challenge facing existing airport campaign groups when incorporating social media into their campaign: A social network analysis of Airport Watch’s social media utilisation. Geoforum 96, pages 236-247.
Crossref
Shola Abidemi Olabode. 2018. Digital Activism and Cyberconflicts in Nigeria. Digital Activism and Cyberconflicts in Nigeria 215 250 .
Jennifer Earl. 2018. The Wiley Blackwell Companion to Social Movements. The Wiley Blackwell Companion to Social Movements 289 305 .
Ting Xue & Jacquelien van Stekelenburg. (2018) When the Internet meets collective action: The traditional and creative ways of political participation in China. Current Sociology 66:6, pages 911-928.
Crossref
Víctor Hugo Masías, Tobias Hecking & Ulrich Hoppe. (2018) Social networking site usage and participation in protest activities in 17 Latin American countries. Telematics and Informatics 35:7, pages 1809-1831.
Crossref
TIM NEWBURN, TREVOR JONES & JARRETT BLAUSTEIN. (2018) Framing the 2011 England Riots: Understanding the Political and Policy Response. The Howard Journal of Crime and Justice 57:3, pages 339-362.
Crossref
Adrija Dey. 2018. Nirbhaya, New Media and Digital Gender Activism. Nirbhaya, New Media and Digital Gender Activism 197 221 .
Innocent Chiluwa. (2018) A nation divided against itself: Biafra and the conflicting online protest discourses. Discourse & Communication 12:4, pages 357-381.
Crossref
Debing Feng & Xiaoping Wu. (2018) Weibo interaction in the discourse of internet anti-corruption: The case of “Brother Watch” event. Discourse, Context & Media 24, pages 99-108.
Crossref
Luca Tratschin. (2018) Wie werden Proteste zu Protesten sozialer Bewegungen?. Sociologia Internationalis 56:2, pages 115-155.
Crossref
Sara M. Hockin & Rod K. Brunson. (2016) The Revolution Might Not Be Televised (But It Will Be Lived Streamed). Race and Justice 8:3, pages 199-215.
Crossref
Merlyna Lim. (2018) Roots, Routes, and Routers: Communications and Media of Contemporary Social Movements. Journalism & Communication Monographs 20:2, pages 92-136.
Crossref
Anne Kaun & Julie Uldam. (2017) Digital activism: After the hype. New Media & Society 20:6, pages 2099-2106.
Crossref
Manuela Farinosi & Leopoldina Fortunati. (2018) Knitting Feminist Politics: Exploring a Yarn-Bombing Performance in a Postdisaster City. Journal of Communication Inquiry 42:2, pages 138-165.
Crossref

Displaying 200 of 394 citing articles. Use the download link below to view the full list of citing articles.

Download full citations list

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.