Abstract

The study of new media use by transnational social movements is central to contemporary investigations of social contention. In order to shed light on the terrain in which the most recent examples of online mobilization have grown and developed, this paper combines the interest in the transnational dynamics of social contention and the exploration of the use of new information and communication technologies (ICTs) for protest action. In specific terms, the study investigates how early twenty-first century social movement coalitions used Internet tools to build symbolically transnational collective identities. By applying a hyperlink network analysis approach, the study focuses on a website network generated by local chapters of the World Social Forum (WSF), one of the earliest social movement coalitions for global justice. The sample network, selected through snowball sampling, is composed of 222 social forum websites from around the world. The study specifically looks at hyperlinks among social forum websites as signs of belonging and potential means of alliance. The analysis uses network measures, namely of cohesion, centrality, structural equivalence and homophily, to test dynamics of symbolic collective identification underlying the WSF coalition. The findings show that in early twenty-first century transnational contention, culture and place still played a central role in the emergence of transnational movement networks.

Highlights

  • The recent “Occupy” and “Indignados” mobilizations in many Western countries have attracted renewed scholarly attention on the use of ICTs in processes of social contention

  • The study focuses on the World Social Forum (WSF) coalition by looking at the early website network produced by its local chapters, i.e., local social forums from around the world

  • 3.2 Methodological Approach In order to map transnational dynamics of collective identification in WSF local chapters, this study explores a sample of social forum websites by applying a Hyperlink Network Analysis (HNA) approach

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The recent “Occupy” and “Indignados” mobilizations in many Western countries have attracted renewed scholarly attention on the use of ICTs in processes of social contention. The integration of new information and communication technologies in protest action has affected the development of social movements and social movement coalitions already since the end of the twentieth century. In order to shed light on the terrain in which the most recent examples of online transnational mobilisation have grown and developed, this paper combines the interest in the transnational dynamics of social contention and the exploration of the use of ICTs by early twenty-first century social movement coalitions. The study focuses on the World Social Forum (WSF) coalition by looking at the early website network produced by its local chapters, i.e., local social forums from around the world

Objectives
Findings
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call