Abstract

This article applies an intersectional feminist lens to social media engagement with European politics. Disproportionately targeted at already marginalised people, the problem of online abuse/harassment has come to increasing public awareness. At the same time, movements such as #BlackLivesMatter and #MeToo have demonstrated the value of social media in facilitating global grassroots activism that challenges dominant structures of power. While the literature on social media engagement with European politics has offered important insights into the extent to which social media facilitates democratic participation, it has not to date sufficiently accounted for patterns of intersectional activism and online inequalities. Using Nancy Fraser’s feminist critique of Habermas’ public sphere theory and Kimberlé Crenshaw’s theory of intersectionality, this article explores patterns of gender and racial inequalities in the digital public space. By analysing both the role of racist and misogynistic online abuse targeted at women, nonbinary, agender, and gender-variant people in public life, as well as the opportunities for marginalised groups to mobilise transnationally through subaltern counter-publics, I argue that social media engagement is inextricably linked with offline inequalities. To fully understand the impact of social media on European democracy, we need to pay attention to gendered and racialised dynamics of power within the digital public sphere that have unequal consequences for democratic participation. This will involve expanding our methodological repertoire and employing tools underpinned by a critical feminist epistemology.

Highlights

  • In this article, I outline a research agenda for an inter‐ sectional feminist approach to social media engagement with European politics

  • The European Institute for Gender Equality has argued that cyber violence against women and girls needs to be understood as a form of gender‐based violence and Politics and Governance, 2022, Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages 161–171 addressed at an EU level (European Institute for Gender Equality, 2017)

  • The appli‐ cation of intersectional feminist theory aims to build on this work by exploring the possibilities for and bar‐ riers to social media participation through the lens of gender and race

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Summary

Introduction

I outline a research agenda for an inter‐ sectional feminist approach to social media engagement with European politics. They have ana‐ lysed the new and inclusive opportunities for transna‐ tional democratic engagement with European politics afforded by social media platforms (see e.g., Barisione & Michailidou, 2017; Bossetta et al, 2018; Brändle et al, 2021; Roose et al, 2017) These challenges and opportunities of social media are generally discussed in isolation from the gendered and racialised structures of power that underpin them. I argue that this task has several dimensions: (a) engaging with feminist critiques of pub‐ lic sphere theory; (b) applying intersectional theory to consider inclusiveness not just in terms of transnational communication and gender, racial, and sexual diver‐ sity; and (c) considering the online sphere as inextrica‐ bly linked to the offline sphere To do this I draw on both Nancy Fraser’s feminist critique of Habermas’ pub‐ lic sphere theory (Fraser, 1992) and Kimberlé Crenshaw’s theory of intersectionality (Crenshaw, 1989, 1991). In line with intersectional femi‐ nism’s recognition of difference, I seek to avoid a reifi‐ cation of the binary gender categories of “woman” and “man.” In this article, I have adopted Moya Bailey’s phrase of “women, nonbinary, agender, and gender‐ variant folks” (Bailey, 2021) to recognise that women experience gender‐based oppression and anyone who falls outside the dominant gender binary

Social Media and European Democracy
The Digital Public Sphere and Intersectional Feminist Critiques
Online Abuse as Participatory Inequality
Subaltern Digital Public Spheres—Spaces of Resistance?
Conclusion
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