96,272
Views
1,896
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Articles

THE LOGIC OF CONNECTIVE ACTION

Digital media and the personalization of contentious politics

&
Pages 739-768 | Received 14 Nov 2011, Accepted 22 Feb 2012, Published online: 10 Apr 2012

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

Read on this site (200)

Jai Kwan Jung. (2023) The candlelight protests in South Korea: a dynamics of contention approach. Social Movement Studies 22:5-6, pages 767-785.
Read now
Verena K. Brändle & Petro Tolochko. (2023) The “Who is Who” of Migration Information Campaigns on Social Media. Journal of Borderlands Studies 38:6, pages 1015-1033.
Read now
Britta Timm Knudsen & Shama Patel. (2023) Digital media revitalising colonial heritage: the George Floyd video translocalized in Denmark. International Journal of Heritage Studies 29:10, pages 1041-1060.
Read now
Steve Jankowski. (2023) The Wikipedia imaginaire: a new media history beyond Wikipedia.org (2001–2022). Internet Histories 7:4, pages 333-353.
Read now
Venetia Papa & Maria Ioannou. (2023) The 10-year anniversary of intense protest in Greece and the role of Facebook. Journal of Information Technology & Politics 20:4, pages 484-502.
Read now
Mirella Paolillo & Paolo Gerbaudo. (2023) Mobilised yet unaffiliated: Italian youth and the uneven return to political participation. Journal of Youth Studies 26:8, pages 963-979.
Read now
Iida Hietala. (2023) Clowns, fuzzy worms and blooming flowers: becoming a ‘creative child’ through arts consumption. Journal of Marketing Management 39:13-14, pages 1331-1365.
Read now
Claiton Marques Correa & Milene Selbach Silveira. (2023) End-User Development Landscape: A Tour into Tailoring Software Research. International Journal of Human–Computer Interaction 39:14, pages 2825-2839.
Read now
Robert Neubauer, Nicolas Graham & Helena Krobath. (2023) Defending “Canadian Energy”: Connective Leadership and Extractive Populism on Canadian Facebook. Environmental Communication 17:6, pages 634-652.
Read now
Xinying Yang, Hongfeng Qiu & Ranran Zhu. (2023) Bargaining with patriarchy or converting men into pro-feminists: social-mediated frame alignment in feminist connective activism. Feminist Media Studies 23:6, pages 2610-2628.
Read now
Yena Lee. (2023) Meso-level leaders as brokers of horizontal and vertical linkages in feminist networked social movements. Information, Communication & Society 26:10, pages 2015-2032.
Read now
Erin Willson, Anika Taylor, Gretchen Kerr & Ashley Stirling. (2023) Discussing safe sport in the digital space: the #gymnastalliance movement. International Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology 0:0, pages 1-20.
Read now
Cansu Elmadagli & David Machin. (2023) The gains and losses of identity politics: the case of a social media social justice movement called stylelikeU. Critical Discourse Studies 20:4, pages 415-435.
Read now
Daniela Kruel DiGiacomo, Erica Hodgin, Joseph Kahne, Samia Alkam & Caitlin Taylor. (2023) Assessing the state of media literacy policy in U.S. K-12 schools. Journal of Children and Media 17:3, pages 336-352.
Read now
Jiyoun Suk, Yibing Sun, Luhang Sun, Mengyu Li, Catalina Farías, Hyerin Kwon, Shreenita Ghosh, Porismita Borah, Darshana Sreedhar Mini, Teresa Correa, Christine Garlough & Dhavan V. Shah. (2023) ‘Think global, act local’: How #MeToo hybridized across borders and platforms for contextual relevance. Information, Communication & Society 0:0, pages 1-22.
Read now
Hossein Kermani & Amirali Tafreshi. (2023) Walking with Bourdieu into Twitter communities: an analysis of networked publics struggling on power in Iranian Twittersphere. Information, Communication & Society 26:8, pages 1653-1674.
Read now
Sangwon Lee & Saifuddin Ahmed. (2023) Social media in black lives matter movement: amplifying or reducing gaps in protest participation?. Journal of Information Technology & Politics 0:0, pages 1-17.
Read now
Rong Wang, Alvin Zhou & Tabitha H. Kinneer. (2023) Moral framing and issue-based framing of #StopAsianHate campaigns on Twitter. Chinese Journal of Communication 0:0, pages 1-19.
Read now
Gerret von Nordheim, Jonas Rieger & Katharina Kleinen-von Königslöw. (2023) From the Fringes to the Core – An Analysis of Right-Wing Populists’ Linking Practices in Seven EU Parliaments and Switzerland. Digital Journalism 11:5, pages 778-796.
Read now
Drina Intyaswati & Malida Tsani Fairuzza. (2023) The Influence of Social Media on Online Political Participation among College Students: Mediation of Political Talks. Southern Communication Journal 88:3, pages 257-265.
Read now
Catherine Knight Steele & Alisa Hardy. (2023) “I Wish I Could Give You This Feeling”: Black Digital Commons and the Rhetoric of “The Corner”. Rhetoric Society Quarterly 53:3, pages 316-327.
Read now
Yu Sun & Scott Wright. (2023) Relay activism and the flows of contentious publicness on WeChat: a case study of COVID-19 in China. Information, Communication & Society 0:0, pages 1-21.
Read now
Jörg Nowak & Marco Santana. (2023) Social Media and Collective Action in Brazil: The Experience of Truck Drivers and Delivery Workers. Socialism and Democracy 0:0, pages 1-21.
Read now
Brian C.H. Fong. (2023) Leaderless Movements? Rethinking Leaders, Spontaneity, and Organisation-Ness. Political Science 75:2, pages 105-121.
Read now
Anaïs Varo, David Hamou, Ana Méndez de Andés, Edurne Bagué & Marco Aparicio Wilhelmi. (2023) Commoning urban infrastructures: Lessons from energy, water and housing commons in Barcelona. Journal of Urban Affairs 0:0, pages 1-20.
Read now
Edma Ajanović & Katharina Fritsch. (2023) Framing Covid-19 through memes: a way for young people to shape the narrative in Austria. Journal of Youth Studies 0:0, pages 1-19.
Read now
Piotr Konieczny. (2023) European Wikipedia platforms, sharing economy and national differences in participation: a case study. Innovation: The European Journal of Social Science Research 0:0, pages 1-30.
Read now
Sarbani Banerjee. (2023) Human crises and the COVID-19 pandemic: a review. Journal for Cultural Research 27:2, pages 121-135.
Read now
Gabriella Lukacs. (2023) The gender of the meme: women and protest media in populist Hungary. Feminist Media Studies 23:3, pages 803-818.
Read now
Joshua Cloudy, Melissa R. Gotlieb & Bryan McLaughlin. (2023) Online political networks as fertile ground for extremism: the roles of group cohesion and perceived group threat. Journal of Information Technology & Politics 0:0, pages 1-10.
Read now
Daniel Oross & Paul Tap. (2023) Moving online: political parties and the internal use of digital tools in Hungary. European Societies 25:2, pages 346-370.
Read now
Håvard Kiberg & Hendrik Spilker. (2023) One More Turn after the Algorithmic Turn? Spotify’s Colonization of the Online Audio Space. Popular Music and Society 46:2, pages 151-171.
Read now
Mengying Li. (2023) Promote diligently and censor politely: how Sina Weibo intervenes in online activism in China. Information, Communication & Society 26:4, pages 730-745.
Read now
Kilian Buehling. (2023) Message Deletion on Telegram: Affected Data Types and Implications for Computational Analysis. Communication Methods and Measures 0:0, pages 1-23.
Read now
Sander van Haperen, Justus Uitermark & Walter Nicholls. (2023) The Swarm versus the Grassroots: places and networks of supporters and opponents of Black Lives Matter on Twitter. Social Movement Studies 22:2, pages 171-189.
Read now
Lina Eklund & Helga Sadowski. (2023) Doing intimate family work through ICTs in the time of networked individualism. Journal of Family Studies 29:2, pages 758-773.
Read now
Jinyu Yang & Bryony Hoskins. (2023) Does university participation facilitate young people’s citizenship behaviour in the UK?. Cambridge Journal of Education 53:2, pages 195-213.
Read now
Vagia Mochla, Georgios Tsourvakas & Iakovos Stoubos. (2023) Segmenting Voters by Motivation to Use Social Media and Their Lifestyle for Political Engagement. Journal of Political Marketing 0:0, pages 1-22.
Read now
Philipp M. Lutscher & Neil Ketchley. (2023) Online repression and tactical evasion: evidence from the 2020 Day of Anger protests in Egypt. Democratization 30:2, pages 325-345.
Read now
Richard Rogers & Giulia Giorgi. (2023) What is a meme, technically speaking?. Information, Communication & Society 0:0, pages 1-19.
Read now
Mi Rosie Jahng, Stine Eckert & Jade Metzger-Riftkin. (2023) Defending the Profession: U.S. Journalists’ Role Understanding in the Era of Fake News. Journalism Practice 17:2, pages 226-244.
Read now
Carisa R. Showden, Emma Barker-Clarke, Judith Sligo & Karen Nairn. (2023) The connective is communal: hybrid activism in online & offline spaces. Social Movement Studies 0:0, pages 1-20.
Read now
Sid Bedingfield. (2023) From Counterpublic to the Mainstream: The New Black Press and the Public Sphere. Journalism Studies 24:2, pages 172-189.
Read now
Allan Watson, Joseph B. Watson & Lou Tompkins. (2023) Does social media pay for music artists? Quantitative evidence on the co-evolution of social media, streaming and live music. Journal of Cultural Economy 16:1, pages 32-46.
Read now
Lisa Garbe, Lisa-Marie Selvik & Pauline Lemaire. (2023) How African countries respond to fake news and hate speech. Information, Communication & Society 26:1, pages 86-103.
Read now
Martin Andersson, Anna Kusetogullari & Joakim Wernberg. (2023) Coding for intangible competitive advantage - mapping the distribution and characteristics of software-developing firms in the Swedish economy. Industry and Innovation 30:1, pages 17-41.
Read now
Juan Antonio Guevara, Julia Atienza-Barthelemy, Daniel Gómez González & José Manuel Robles. (2023) Polarization and incivility in digital debates on women’s rights in Spain. Not just a matter of machismo. Journal of Gender Studies 32:1, pages 18-32.
Read now
Michelle Catanzaro & Philippa Collin. (2023) Kids communicating climate change: learning from the visual language of the SchoolStrike4Climate protests. Educational Review 75:1, pages 9-32.
Read now
Yao-Tai Li & Katherine Whitworth. (2023) Contentious Repertoires: Examining Lennon Walls in Hong Kong’s Social Unrest of 2019. Journal of Contemporary Asia 53:1, pages 124-145.
Read now
Olga Gjerald & Hande Eslen-Ziya. (2022) From discontent to action: #quarantinehotel as not just a hashtag. Cogent Social Sciences 8:1.
Read now
Jay Johnson, Matthew Masucci, Jessica Chin & Mary Anne Signer Kroeker. (2022) Is the medium the message? Exploring the intersection of social media and collective action in the San José Bike Party. Annals of Leisure Research 0:0, pages 1-17.
Read now
Lisa Lindqvist & Simon Lindgren. (2022) Mapping an Emerging Hashtag Ecosystem: Connective Action and Interpretive Frames in the Swedish #MeToo Movement. Feminist Media Studies 0:0, pages 1-18.
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
Rachel E. Moran & Stephen Prochaska. (2022) Misinformation or activism?: analyzing networked moral panic through an exploration of #SaveTheChildren. Information, Communication & Society 0:0, pages 1-21.
Read now
Maria Laura Ruiu & Massimo Ragnedda. (2022) Comparing the Empowerment Dynamics of Traditional Media and Social News Sites: The Case of GameStop. Digital Journalism 0:0, pages 1-22.
Read now
Samuel Merrill & Nigel Copsey. (2022) Retweet solidarity: transatlantic Twitter connectivity between militant antifascists in the USA and UK. Social Movement Studies 0:0, pages 1-21.
Read now
Jeehyun Kim, Yong-Chan Kim, Ahra Cho, Euikyung Shin & Yeji Kwon. (2022) How do social media affect people’s compassion and civic action? The case of the Sewol Ferry disaster in Korea. Asian Journal of Communication 32:6, pages 469-486.
Read now
Annett Heft, Susanne Reinhardt & Barbara Pfetsch. (2022) Mobilization and support structures in radical right party networks. Digital political communication ecologies in the 2019 European parliament elections. Information, Communication & Society 0:0, pages 1-21.
Read now
Mónika Simon, Kasper Welbers, Anne C. Kroon & Damian Trilling. (2022) Linked in the dark: A network approach to understanding information flows within the Dutch Telegramsphere. Information, Communication & Society 0:0, pages 1-25.
Read now
Andrew Peterson, Mark Evans, Martá Fülöp, Dina Kiwan, Jasmine B-Y Sim & Ian Davies. (2022) Youth activism and education across contexts: towards a framework of critical engagements. Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education 52:7, pages 1088-1106.
Read now
Monica Colombo & Fabio Quassoli. (2022) “Is this terrorism?” The Italian media and the Macerata shooting. Critical Studies on Terrorism 15:4, pages 759-781.
Read now
Laura Cervi & Carles Marín-Lladó. (2022) Freepalestine on TikTok: from performative activism to (meaningful) playful activism. Journal of International and Intercultural Communication 15:4, pages 414-434.
Read now
Gregory Asmolov. (2022) Internet regulation and crisis-related resilience: from Covid-19 to existential risks. The Communication Review 25:3-4, pages 235-257.
Read now
Penchan Phoborisut. (2022) Public performances as assemblages: contesting the narrative of Thailand’s 2010 crackdown. Text and Performance Quarterly 42:4, pages 475-498.
Read now
Tai Neilson & Kara Ortiga. (2022) Mobs, Crowds, and Trolls: Theorizing the Harassment of Journalists in the Philippines. Digital Journalism 0:0, pages 1-16.
Read now
Vassilis Charitsis & Mikko Laamanen. (2022) When digital capitalism takes (on) the neighbourhood: data activism meets place-based collective action. Social Movement Studies 0:0, pages 1-18.
Read now
Jennifer Oser, Amit Grinson, Shelley Boulianne & Eran Halperin. (2022) How Political Efficacy Relates to Online and Offline Political Participation: A Multilevel Meta-analysis. Political Communication 39:5, pages 607-633.
Read now
Nathan Schneider. (2022) The Tyranny of openness: what happened to peer production?. Feminist Media Studies 22:6, pages 1411-1428.
Read now
Emma Christensen. (2022) Ideal-Practice Entanglement: When Emergence Fails to Enrich the Deliberate Planning Model. International Journal of Strategic Communication 16:4, pages 539-554.
Read now
Alan Shipman & Ann Vogel. (2022) Streaming the festival: what is lost when cultural events go online. Review of Social Economy 0:0, pages 1-21.
Read now
David Grandadam, Patrick Cohendet & Raphaël Suire. (2022) Building and nurturing grassroots innovation: A policy framework based on the local commons. European Planning Studies 30:8, pages 1577-1595.
Read now
Saadia Izzeldin Malik. (2022) Sudan’s December revolution of 2018: the ecology of Youth Connective and Collective Activism. Information, Communication & Society 25:10, pages 1495-1510.
Read now
Apryl Williams & Benjamin K. Tkach. (2022) Access and dissemination of information and emerging media convergence in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Information, Communication & Society 25:10, pages 1383-1399.
Read now
Malayna Raftopoulos & Doug Specht. (2022) Frack-Off: Social Media Fights Against Fracking in Argentina. Environmental Communication 16:5, pages 598-611.
Read now
Saif Shahin & Yee Man Margaret Ng. (2022) Connective action or collective inertia? Emotion, cognition, and the limits of digitally networked resistance. Social Movement Studies 21:4, pages 530-548.
Read now
Markus Lundström & Paola Sartoretto. (2022) The temporal nexus of collective memory mediation: print and digital media in Brazil’s Landless Movement 1984-2019. Social Movement Studies 21:4, pages 453-468.
Read now
Marit Rosol & Gwendolyn Blue. (2022) From the smart city to urban justice in a digital age. City 26:4, pages 684-705.
Read now
Gregory J. Fisher. (2022) How Will Self-Manufacture and the Maker Movement Reshape Consumer Preferences?. Research-Technology Management 65:4, pages 18-26.
Read now
Daniel S. Lane, Kevin Do & Nancy Molina-Rogers. (2022) What is political expression on social media anyway?: A systematic review. Journal of Information Technology & Politics 19:3, pages 331-345.
Read now
Matan Aharoni & Sabina Lissitsa. (2022) Closing the Distance? Representation of European Asylum Seekers in Israeli Mainstream, Community, and Social Media. Journalism Practice 16:6, pages 1150-1167.
Read now
Andrés Scherman, Sebastián Valenzuela & Sebastián Rivera. (2022) Youth environmental activism in the age of social media: the case of Chile (2009-2019). Journal of Youth Studies 25:6, pages 751-770.
Read now
Juma Kasadha. (2022) Digital Reconciliation: A Social Media Reconciliation Model (SMRC). Peace Review 34:3, pages 431-439.
Read now
Davide Beraldo. (2022) Movements as multiplicities and contentious branding: lessons from the digital exploration of #Occupy and #Anonymous. Information, Communication & Society 25:8, pages 1098-1114.
Read now
Renée Moernaut, Jelle Mast, Martina Temmerman & Marcel Broersma. (2022) Hot weather, hot topic. Polarization and sceptical framing in the climate debate on Twitter. Information, Communication & Society 25:8, pages 1047-1066.
Read now
Arnt Maasø & Hendrik Storstein Spilker. (2022) The Streaming Paradox: Untangling the Hybrid Gatekeeping Mechanisms of Music Streaming. Popular Music and Society 45:3, pages 300-316.
Read now
Curd Knüpfer, Matthias Hoffmann & Vadim Voskresenskii. (2022) Hijacking MeToo: transnational dynamics and networked frame contestation on the far right in the case of the ‘120 decibels' campaign. Information, Communication & Society 25:7, pages 1010-1028.
Read now
Martin Zicari. (2022) Digital Contention in Latin America. Performance Research 27:3-4, pages 71-80.
Read now
Tanya Gibbs & Ankitha Cheerakathil. (2022) Alternative voting methods applied through ICT to enhance political participation in the Czech Republic. Innovation: The European Journal of Social Science Research 0:0, pages 1-14.
Read now
Alexandra Goritz, Johannes Schuster, Helge Jörgens & Nina Kolleck. (2022) International Public Administrations on Twitter: A Comparison of Digital Authority in Global Climate Policy. Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis: Research and Practice 24:3, pages 271-295.
Read now
Rachel R. Mourão & Danielle K. Brown. (2022) Black Lives Matter Coverage: How Protest News Frames and Attitudinal Change Affect Social Media Engagement. Digital Journalism 10:4, pages 626-646.
Read now
Stefan Naef, Stephan M. Wagner & Christian Saur. (2022) Blockchain and network governance: learning from applications in the supply chain sector. Production Planning & Control 0:0, pages 1-15.
Read now
Ilkka Koiranen, Aki Koivula, Sanna Malinen & Teo Keipi. (2022) Undercurrents of echo chambers and flame wars: party political correlates of social media behavior. Journal of Information Technology & Politics 19:2, pages 197-213.
Read now
Heba Raouf Ezzat. (2022) Palimpsests of civicness: Spontaneity and the Egyptian Uprising/Cairo 2011. Journal of Civil Society 18:2, pages 239-261.
Read now
Christi J. Guerrini, Jorge L. Contreras, Whitney Bash Brooks, Isabel Canfield, Meredith Trejo & Amy L. McGuire. (2022) “Idealists and capitalists”: ownership attitudes and preferences in genomic citizen science. New Genetics and Society 41:2, pages 74-95.
Read now
Tegan R. Bratcher. (2022) Toward a deeper discussion: a survey analysis of podcasts and personalized politics. Atlantic Journal of Communication 30:2, pages 188-199.
Read now
Samuel A. Greene. (2022) You are what you read: media, identity, and community in the 2020 Belarusian uprising. Post-Soviet Affairs 38:1-2, pages 88-106.
Read now
Nazanin Shahrokni & Spyros A. Sofos. (2022) Mobilizing pity: the dialectics of narrative production and erasure in the case of Iran’s #BlueGirl. Globalizations 19:2, pages 205-219.
Read now
Stefano De Marco, José Manuel Robles, Borja Moya-Gómez & Daniel Gomez (UCM). (2022) The Un-Connectivity of Connective Parties: Analyzing the Online Interaction Patterns of Unidos Podemos in Spain. Journal of Political Marketing 0:0, pages 1-14.
Read now
Jessica E. Boscarino. (2022) Constructing visual policy narratives in new media: the case of the Dakota Access Pipeline. Information, Communication & Society 25:2, pages 278-294.
Read now
Juho Vesa, Petro Poutanen, Reijo Sund & Mika Vehka. (2022) An effective ‘weapon’ for the weak? Digital media and interest groups’ media success. Information, Communication & Society 25:2, pages 258-277.
Read now
Anne Durand, Toon Zijlstra, Niels van Oort, Sascha Hoogendoorn-Lanser & Serge Hoogendoorn. (2022) Access denied? Digital inequality in transport services. Transport Reviews 42:1, pages 32-57.
Read now
Ismail Shaheer, Neil Carr & Andrea Insch. (2021) Voices behind destination boycotts – an ecofeminist perspective. Tourism Recreation Research 0:0, pages 1-17.
Read now
Marta Dynel & Fabio Indìo Massimo Poppi. (2021) Caveat emptor: boycott through digital humour on the wave of the 2019 Hong Kong protests. Information, Communication & Society 24:15, pages 2323-2341.
Read now
Inés Durán Matute & Rodrigo Camarena González. (2021) The machinery of #techno-colonialism crafting “democracy.” A glimpse into digital sub-netizenship in Mexico. Democratization 28:8, pages 1545-1563.
Read now
Agnieszka Vetulani-Cęgiel & Trisha Meyer. (2021) Power to the people? Evaluating the European Commission’s engagement efforts in EU copyright policy. Journal of European Integration 43:8, pages 1025-1043.
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
Jordana George, Natalie Gerhart & Russell Torres. (2021) Uncovering the Truth about Fake News: A Research Model Grounded in Multi-Disciplinary Literature. Journal of Management Information Systems 38:4, pages 1067-1094.
Read now
Jenny Huberman. (2021) A single narrative will not do: Capitalism in the digital age. Reviews in Anthropology 50:3-4, pages 60-79.
Read now
Anke Wonneberger, Iina R. Hellsten & Sandra H. J. Jacobs. (2021) Hashtag activism and the configuration of counterpublics: Dutch animal welfare debates on Twitter. Information, Communication & Society 24:12, pages 1694-1711.
Read now
Alexia Maddox & Luke Heemsbergen. (2021) The electrified social and its dark alternatives: policing and politics in the computational age. Continuum 35:5, pages 692-705.
Read now
Eric S. Jenkins & Monica Huzinec. (2021) Memeability in an Attention Economy: On the Form of the Nike Kaepernick Meme. Southern Communication Journal 86:4, pages 402-415.
Read now
Mohamed M. Mostafa. (2021) Information Diffusion in Halal Food Social Media: A Social Network Approach. Journal of International Consumer Marketing 33:4, pages 471-491.
Read now
Jimmyn Parc & Patrick Messerlin. (2021) The true impact of shorter and longer copyright durations: from authors’ earnings to cultural creativity and diversity. International Journal of Cultural Policy 27:5, pages 607-620.
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
Josep Lobera & Martín Portos. (2021) Decentralizing electoral campaigns? New-old parties, grassroots and digital activism. Information, Communication & Society 24:10, pages 1419-1440.
Read now
Samantha Cenere. (2021) Making translations, translating Making. City 25:3-4, pages 355-375.
Read now
Lise Kjølsrød. (2021) Fuzing Play and Politics: On Individualized Collective Action in Leisure. Leisure Sciences 0:0, pages 1-20.
Read now
Luping Wang, Aimei Yang & Kjerstin Thorson. (2021) Serial participants of social media climate discussion as a community of practice: a longitudinal network analysis. Information, Communication & Society 24:7, pages 941-959.
Read now
Sophia Gaenssle & Oliver Budzinski. (2021) Stars in social media: new light through old windows?. Journal of Media Business Studies 18:2, pages 79-105.
Read now
Adrian Rauchfleisch, Daniel Vogler & Mark Eisenegger. (2021) Public Sphere in Crisis Mode: How the COVID-19 Pandemic Influenced Public Discourse and User Behaviour in the Swiss Twitter-sphere. Javnost - The Public 28:2, pages 129-148.
Read now
Wanli Xing. (2021) Large-scale path modeling of remixing to computational thinking. Interactive Learning Environments 29:3, pages 414-427.
Read now
Evangelos Papadimitropoulos. (2021) Platform Capitalism, Platform Cooperativism, and the Commons. Rethinking Marxism 33:2, pages 246-262.
Read now
Boran Ali Mercan & Altuğ Yalçıntaş. (2021) Deconstructing the Discourse of Self-Corrective Intellectual Property Markets. Rethinking Marxism 33:2, pages 281-303.
Read now
Stephen Danley. (2021) An activist in the field: Social media, ethnography, and community. Journal of Urban Affairs 43:3, pages 397-413.
Read now
Yunqiang Liu, Jialing Zhu, Xiaoyu Shao, Naveen C. Adusumilli & Fang Wang. (2021) Diffusion patterns in disaster-induced internet public opinion: based on a Sina Weibo online discussion about the ‘Liangshan fire’ in China. Environmental Hazards 20:2, pages 163-187.
Read now
Lucy Osler. (2021) Taking empathy online. Inquiry 0:0, pages 1-28.
Read now
Luke Cooper. (2021) Worlds beyond capitalism: images of uneven and combined development in Kim Stanley Robinson’s Mars trilogy. Cambridge Review of International Affairs 34:2, pages 228-249.
Read now
Rachel Macrorie, Simon Marvin & Aidan While. (2021) Robotics and automation in the city: a research agenda. Urban Geography 42:2, pages 197-217.
Read now
Homero Gil de Zúñiga, Alberto Ardèvol-Abreu & Andreu Casero-Ripollés. (2021) WhatsApp political discussion, conventional participation and activism: exploring direct, indirect and generational effects. Information, Communication & Society 24:2, pages 201-218.
Read now
A. Benda Hofmeyr. (2021) The feasibility of resistance in the workplace: A critical investigation. Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 21:1.
Read now
Corelia Baibarac, Doina Petrescu & Phillip Langley. (2021) Prototyping open digital tools for urban commoning. CoDesign 17:1, pages 83-100.
Read now
Rossana Sampugnaro & Francesca Montemagno. (2021) In Search of the Americanization: Candidates and Political Campaigns in European General Election. Journal of Political Marketing 20:1, pages 34-49.
Read now
Nicholas Gervassis. (2021) Information biopolitics: copyright law and the regulation of life in the network society. International Review of Law, Computers & Technology 35:1, pages 46-69.
Read now
Delia Dumitrica & Mylynn Felt. (2020) Mediated grassroots collective action: negotiating barriers of digital activism. Information, Communication & Society 23:13, pages 1821-1837.
Read now
Sai Wang. (2020) The Influence of Anonymity and Incivility on Perceptions of User Comments on News Websites. Mass Communication and Society 23:6, pages 912-936.
Read now
Veronica Barassi & Lorenzo Zamponi. (2020) Social media time, identity narratives and the construction of political biographies. Social Movement Studies 19:5-6, pages 592-608.
Read now
Thomas Poell. (2020) Social media, temporality, and the legitimacy of protest. Social Movement Studies 19:5-6, pages 609-624.
Read now
Samuel Merrill & Simon Lindgren. (2020) The rhythms of social movement memories: the mobilization of Silvio Meier’s activist remembrance across platforms. Social Movement Studies 19:5-6, pages 657-674.
Read now
Bharath Ganesh. (2020) Weaponizing white thymos: flows of rage in the online audiences of the alt-right. Cultural Studies 34:6, pages 892-924.
Read now
Li Chen, Qi Ling, Tingjia Cao & Ke Han. (2020) Mislabeled, fragmented, and conspiracy-driven: a content analysis of the social media discourse about the HPV vaccine in China. Asian Journal of Communication 30:6, pages 450-469.
Read now
Avigail McClelland-Cohen & Camille G. Endacott. (2020) The Signs of Our Discontent: Framing Collective Identity at the Women’s March on Washington. Communication Studies 71:5, pages 842-856.
Read now
Donncha Kavanagh & Paul Dylan-Ennis. (2020) Cryptocurrencies and the emergence of blockocracy. The Information Society 36:5, pages 290-300.
Read now
Yan Su & Jun Hu. (2020) A territorial dispute or an agenda war? A cross-national investigation of the network agenda-setting (NAS) model. Journal of Information Technology & Politics 17:4, pages 357-375.
Read now
Brian Collins, Jose Marichal & Richard Neve. (2020) The social media commons: Public sphere, agonism, and algorithmic obligation. Journal of Information Technology & Politics 17:4, pages 409-425.
Read now
Donna Chu. (2020) Civic intentionality in youth media participation: the case of Hong Kong. Learning, Media and Technology 45:4, pages 363-375.
Read now
John Parkinson. (2020) The Roles of Referendums in Deliberative Systems. Representation 56:4, pages 485-500.
Read now
Rhys Crilley, Ilan Manor & Corneliu Bjola. (2020) Visual narratives of global politics in the digital age: an introduction. Cambridge Review of International Affairs 33:5, pages 628-637.
Read now
ZhiMin Xiao. (2020) Mobile phones as life and thought companions. Research Papers in Education 35:5, pages 511-528.
Read now
Paul Mihailidis. (2020) The civic potential of memes and hashtags in the lives of young people. Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education 41:5, pages 762-781.
Read now
Fiona Suwana. (2020) What motivates digital activism? The case of the Save KPK movement in Indonesia. Information, Communication & Society 23:9, pages 1295-1310.
Read now

Displaying 200 of 1896 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.