Mediating the Public Sphere

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
“Social Movements as Politics” Charles Tilly. Introduction By 21C SM recognized as Global phenomenon: Zimbabwe, EU, Jubilee 2000, Costa Rica to Canada.
Advertisements

Jeremy Brecher, Tim Costello and Brendan Smith Social Movements 2.0.
GOVT : Comparative Social Movements Course Review.
“Social Movements as Politics” Charles Tilly. Introduction By 21C SM recognized as Global phenomenon: Zimbabwe, EU, Jubilee 2000, Costa Rica to Canada.
Growing up Digital Opportunities and challenges for parents.
2014: A Celebratory Year World Wide Web’s 25 Year Anniversary W3C’s 20 Year Anniversary 10 June
Atif Iqbal, R. K. Bagga.  Appropriate mechanism for good governance with the involvement of Information Technology in the system of the government and.
Knowing Your Facebook From Your Flickr Dan O’ Neill – -
Web-Based GIS and the Future of Participatory GIS Applications within Local and Indigenous Communities By Dr. Peter A. Kyem, GISP. (Professor of Geography)
What Are Social Movements? Consider this definition from Tilly (2004:3-4): "As it developed in the West after 1750, the social movement emerged from an.
Government IT Professionals Online Survey Results FINAL REPORT September 2010.
July 15, 2013 Brian M. Conley, PhD Mediating the Public Sphere.
Looking for a job is not a “One Time Thing” On average, workers will change jobs about seven times during their careers. Nearly 80% of all jobs require.
Social Media & Social Networking 101 Canadian Society of Safety Engineering (CSSE)
Monitoring & Evaluation Capacity Strengthening Workshop WORKSHOP INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW.
Digitally Enabled Social Change Jakob Svensson Cyberculture and politics, spring semester 2015.
SW 406 Chapter 3 Group Skills for Organizational and Community Change.
Presented by Mark Flavin
COMPLIMENTARY TEACHING MATERIALS
Creating your online identity
Create a social network
Keeping Children Safe Online
Name: Sayyid Ali Hussein Gaabane
A New Deal: Making Education Change
Managing the Bowl for Kids’ Sake Committee
Chapter 16 Participating in Groups and Teams.
Capitalizing on Social Media
Eric Schmidt - Assignment
Global Citizens Movement
Open All Areas Difficulties met in the process
UNIT 4 – THE COST OF FREE LESSON 4.
Nicole Steen-Dutton, ClickDimensions
E-Commerce Theories & Practices
Vocabulary Big Data - “Big data is a broad term for datasets so large or complex that traditional data processing applications are inadequate.” Moore’s.
1. Define a Vision & Identify Business Scenarios
Enabling Collaboration with IT
Finding a Job Gathering Leads
AFCEA Chapters and Social Media
Inquiry Learning in English Language Arts
Why social media matters
Finding, Connecting, and Converting Profitable Buyers
Objectives The courage to be persistent in order to reach your goals
Global Digital Content Management: Today & the Future
The Global State of Democracy and the crisis of representation
Automating Profitable Growth™
Geospatial Data Use and sharing Concepts
NISD Leadership Academy
Visual Story Network Strategic Planning
Automating Profitable Growth™
Inquiry Learning in English Language Arts
Building Team Relationships
Finding a Job Gathering Leads
UNIT 4 – THE COST OF FREE LESSON 6.
PERSON CENTERED APPROACH
10 Lines Brought to you by: Team Art Attack!
Ben Jones - S Rebecca Hunter - S
От Всемирного Дня к Всемирному Запуску IPv6. В этот раз по-настоящему
Customising Your Club Meeting
Standard for Teachers’ Professional Development July 2016
Using the international network to recruit local members
Count Us In! The Count Us In! campaign engages men and women to bring about change: more women in trade union leadership positions and concerted efforts.
Developed by HC3, USAID’s Flagship Health Communication Project
Trends and Terminology in Online Learning
Implications of openly licenced resources for librarians
Building Your Adaptive Leadership Skills
Adaptive Leadership for Sustainable Networks
Strategic Planning Long & Short Term
Online Safety Social Media & Cyberbullying
Online Safety Social Media & Cyberbullying
Avoiding Mission Creep
Presentation transcript:

Mediating the Public Sphere July 15, 2013 Brian M. Conley, PhD

Mediating the Public Sphere Core Research Question: In what way has the rise of so-called social media impacted the nature and development of social movement organizing?

Mediating the Public Sphere Outline: Defining our Terms 1. Politics/Public Sphere 2. Social Movements 3. Social Media/Web 2.0 It is always important to try to define your terms.

Mediating the Public Sphere Defining Our Terms: Politics (Public Sphere?) One definition… “Politics is who gets what, when, and how.” -Harold Laswell. Any others?

Mediating the Public Sphere Defining Our Terms: Social Movements: Jasper and Goodwin: “…are conscious, concerted, and sustained efforts by ordinary people to change some aspect of their society by using extra-institutional means.” Tilly: …involve the expression of “contentious politics…” Freeman: Involve “a pre-existing communication system that is co-optable to the ideas of the emerging SM, and a event or the emergence of a leader.”

Origins of Social Movements Tilly: Views Social Movements as distinctive form of contentious politics: Contentious: to the extent that they “involve collective making of claims…that…conflict with someone’s else interests…” Politics: “in the sense that governments of one sort or another figure … in the claim making…as claimants, objects of claims, allies of the objects, or monitors of the contention. ”

Defining Social Movements Defining SM: Three (3) Elements: 1) Campaigns: sustained, organized public collective claim-making which link Claimants, Objects of claims, and the Public. 2) Repertoire: the development of special purpose public displays (rallies, marches, media campaigns, vigils) that are integrated into a sustained campaign. 3) WUNC: Public displays of Worthiness, Unity, Numbers and Commitment.

Defining Social Movements Campaigns: Link Claimants, objects of claims, and the “public” Objects of Claimants (State, Corporation, religious leadership) Sustained Effort Public Claimants (SM)

Defining Social Movements Campaigns: Link Claimants, objects of claims, and the “public” Objects of Claimants (State, Corporation, religious leadership) Institutional Sustained Effort Public Claimants (SM)

Defining Social Movements Campaigns: Link Claimants, objects of claims, and the “public” Objects of Claimants (State, Corporation, Religious leadership) Repertoire Public Claimants (SM) Meetings, Processions, Vigils, Rallies, Demonstrations, Petitions, Media Campaigns

Defining Social Movements Campaigns: Link Claimants, objects of claims, and the “public” Objects of Claimants (State, Corporation, Religious leadership) Social Media ? Public Claimants (SM) “a pre-existing communication system that is co-optable to the ideas of the emerging SM.”

Defining Social Movements Campaigns: Link Claimants, objects of claims, and the “public” Objects of Claimants (State, Corporation, Religious leadership) Social Media ? Public Claimants (SM) “a pre-existing communication system that is co-optable to the ideas of the emerging SM.”

Brecher, Costello and Smith Social Movements 2.0 What's New and What's Not Social networking is not new and not about technology. What is Technology? Social Networking? It's not about MySpace, Facebook or YouTube; instead it's about what all of us do every day: kindle and expand networks of friends, family, co-workers, etc. In Politics In the politics, it's about finding and building communities of interest, linking common struggles and acting collectively.

Social Movements 2.0 Revolutionary Potential: from Web 1.0 to Web 2.0 During the past several years, the Internet has evolved from its first generation as a static information portal (e.g. websites) to what is now referred to as Web 2.0: user-generated and interactive content. Web 2.0 Could amount to the "largest increase in human expressive capability in history."

Social Movements 2.0 Revolutionary Potential: from Web 1.0 to Web 2.0 What makes the web 2.0 potentially revolutionary: 1. Group Formation 2. Scale and amplification 3. Interactivity 4. Destruction of hierarchies 5. Cheapness and ease of tools

Social Movements 2.0 Problems and Questions Web 2.0 also raises an number of challenging questions: What does it mean when individuals begin organizing outside and without the help of traditional organizations? It's easy and cheap for organizations to bring people together into a swarm or smart mob, but what do you do with them then? Will offline social movement organizations be willing to cede control as ordinary people increasingly leverage social networking tools to channel their own activities? How does offline and online social movement building fit together?

Captain: Occupy Geeks a Facebook for the 99%” Building Their Own Network “I don’t want to say we’re making our own Facebook. But, we’re making our own Facebook,” Their Vision: A Semantic Web “They hope the technology they are developing can go well beyond Occupy Wall Street to help establish more distributed social networks, better online business collaboration and perhaps even add to the long-dreamed-of semantic web — an internet made not of messy text, but one unified by underlying meta-data that computers can easily parse.”

Facebook for the 99% Moving Beyond Existing (Corporate) Networks “Now it’s time for activists to move beyond other people’s social networks and build their own.” It is a Question of Trust: “We don’t want to trust Facebook with private messages among activists.”

Facebook for the 99% Moving Beyond Existing (Corporate) Networks: Facilitating Trust “One challenge that all of the new efforts face is a very difficult one for non centralized services: ensuring that members are trustworthy. Why Does Trust Matter? “That’s critical for activists who risk injury or arrest in all countries and even death in some. To build trust, local and international networks will use a friend-of-a-friend model in Knutson and Boyer’s projects. Need Group to Join “People can’t become full members on their own as they can with social networks likeTwitter, Facebook and Google+.”

Facebook for the 99% Facilitating Trust: How it Works “In the new OWS tech, an activist’s local-occupation network can vouch for a user to another network, and the local networks all trust each other, they all trust that activist. Someone can sign into one network and post and comment on them all.” Need Group to Join “People can’t become full members on their own as they can with social networks likeTwitter, Facebook and Google+.”

Facebook for the 99% Alternative Networks in the Works: Global Square Diaspora Activists Sites: Take the Square (Spanish 15M Movement: Track Occupations Globally) US Day of Rage (US: Campaign Finance Reform Movement, OWS co- founder)

Facebook for the 99% The Goal: Build an International Network “Through all those connections, Knutson has focused on building the technology for an international occupations network. Working Ideas: Federated General Assembly (US occupations) A Semantic Web: The Technology Resource Description Framework, or RDF, a universal labeling system.

Facebook for the 99% The Goal: Build an International Network “Through all those connections, Knutson has focused on building the technology for an international occupations network. Working Ideas: Federated General Assembly (US occupations)

Facebook for the 99% Build an International Network: The Challenges Universal Agreement: “The problem the coders face will be the same one that’s faced the web for years – getting people to agree on standards and to then adopt them.” Politics of Networking “But the politics are tricky. Some of the people in Spain are kind of resentful of OWS, because they got all of the credit,” he said, noting that the Spanish occupations started first and are still far bigger.”

Critics: Social Movements 2.0 Malcolm Gladwell: Small Change Traditionally, Social Movements depended upon, and represented “strong-tie” connections between people and groups. Examples: Greensboro Lunch Counter Sit-In Freedom Summer (Mississippi 1964) East German Resistance groups Red Brigades (Italy) Mujahideen (Afghanistan) In each case, it was the strength of a person or group’s connection to others that got them involved, and kept them involved.

Critics: Social Movements 2.0 Social Media: Too Often Baced on weak connections “The platforms of social media are built around weak ties.” Tools Before Causes “Where activists were once defined by their causes, they are now defined by their tools …”

Critics: Social Movements 2.0 Social Media: There is a Strength in Weak Connections Social Media is “terrific at the diffusion of innovation, interdisciplinary collaboration, seamlessly matching up buyers and sellers, and the logistical functions of the dating world.” “But weak ties seldom lead to high-risk activism.” Limitations: Might Inform, But Does It compel Action, Participation “Facebook activism succeeds not by motivating people to make a real sacrifice but by motivating them to do the things that people do when they are not motivated enough to make a real sacrifice.”

Critics: Social Movements 2.0 Social Media: Not a Fully Formed Social Network Social networks don’t simply inform or motivation, they compel people to act, and keep their involved, and some cases alive afterwards. Greensboro Example: Students Part of a Network Social Media: Networks that lacks Hierarchy “Facebook and the like are tools for building networks, which are the opposite, in structure and character, of hierarchies.” In particular, they lack discipline and strategic thinking, and rely instead on “resilience and adaptability.” “How do you make difficult choices about tactics or strategy or philosophical direction when everyone has an equal say?”

Critics: Social Movements 2.0 Social Media: Works Better in Low rather than High Risk Situations “But it is simply a form of organizing which favors the weak-tie connections that give us access to information over the strong-tie connections that help us persevere in the face of danger.” An Inconsequential Life: Such a system “makes it easier for activists to express themselves, and harder for that expression to have any impact.”

Questions Questions: Social Media: Has It Changed Anything? Gladwell: “In order for an innovation to make a real difference, it has to solve a problem that was actually a problem in the first place.” Turkish Example: Who Controls Web 2.0? Does the use of social media empower the state (or corporations) to the extent that its content or functionality may be controlled by either the government or the companies that manage/own the network?