Title
Being a Serial Transnational Activist
Abstract
Transnational activism endures as a political practice turning a mirror onto the world's powerbrokers. We analyse a variety of transnational activism best characterized as serial by virtue of an observed systematic time and border-spanning commitment to protest communication. Following statistical disambiguation of a dataset of 2.5 million unique Twitter users, we identified a subset of exceptionally prolific communicators and interviewed 21 of them. We show that a noted prominence in networked communication of otherwise unremarkable Twitter users may be an upshot of purposive strategies intended to publicize, support or help orchestrate collective action. Accordingly, we propose the term \"engagement compass\" to address the relationship between activists' life-patterns and their personal investment in protest over time.
Year
DOI
Venue
2016
10.1111/jcc4.12150
Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication
Keywords
Field
DocType
Transnational Activism,Social Media,Diffusion,Celebrity,Frame Clouding,Disengagement
Social psychology,Collective action,Social media,Compass,Sociology,Virtue,Disengagement theory,Politics
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
21
2
1083-6101
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
2
0.42
7
Authors
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Dan Mercea191.72
Marco Toledo Bastos2172.99