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Page 1: Protesting in the age of social media WAPOR Bogota 2012

Protesting in theage of social mediaInformation, opinion expression and activism in online networks

Sebas t i án Va l enzue l a , PhD

Facultad de Comunicaciones UC

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POLITICAL-TECHNOLOGICAL

Two correlated trends

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Tunisia, Dec. 2010

Chile, Aug. 2011

Egypt, Jan. 2011Madrid, May 2011

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Facebook users around the world

http://i.i.com.com/cnwk.1d/i/tim/2012/02/01/FB-regioncomp2_610x363.png

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CAUSES AND EFFECTS

Correlation is not necessarily causation. Yet,…

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ViralMS

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Existing research

Studies based on an individual-level approach

tend to find a positive relationship between

frequency of social media use and protest

behavior, in line with existing research on the

digital media-citizen participation link.(Gil de Zúñiga, Jung, & Valenzuela, 2012; Park, Kee, & Valenzuela, 2009; Rojas & Puig-i-Abril, 2009; Valenzuela,

Park & Kee, 2009; Zhang, Johnson, Seltzer, & Bichard, 2010).

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• Access to a large number of contacts helps

social movements reach critical mass (Lovejoy & Saxton,

2012).

• Personal and group identity construction

through reinforcement of group norms (Dalton, Sickle,

& Weldon, 2009; Papacharissi, 2010) .

• Build trusting relationships among members (Gilbert & Karahalios, 2009).

• Interest in collective issues by gaining insight

into the circumstances of others (Bennett & Segerberg,

2011).

Possible mechanisms

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• Information: social media as news sources or

information hubs (Gil de Zúñiga, Jung, & Valenzuela, 2012).

• Political expression: social media as spaces for

expressing political opinions (Pingree, 2007).

• Activism: social media as venues for joining

causes and opportunities for mobilization (Yamamoto, 2006).

Possible mechanisms (cont´d)

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• H1. Frequency of social media use will be

positively related to protest behavior.

• H2. Using social media for news consumption,

opinion expression and activism mediates the

relationship between frequency of social

media use and protest behavior.

Hypotheses

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Method

• Data: 3rd round of the “Jóvenes y Participación”

survey by Periodismo UDP-Feedback S.A.

• Cross-sectional survey of a representative sample of

adults living in Chile’s three main urban areas.

• Sample: multistage area probability sample stratified

by geographical region.

• Mode: face-to-face interviews.

• Sample size: 1,737 (data weighted due to youth

oversample).

• Fieldwork: Aug. 19 – Sept. 6 2011

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Variables

• Protest : public demonstrations, political forums/debates, petitioning, meeting authorities, letters to the media.

• Social media: Overall use of Facebook, Twitter, Google+ and YouTube (α = .70), hard news, opinionexpression (α = .83), activism (α = .79).

• Control variables:– Political and economic grievances

– Human values

– Material and psychological resources

– Online and offline hard news

– Interpersonal political discussion

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IMPACT

Results for H1:

What are the effects of frequency of social media use

on the likelihood of engaging in protest behavior?

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MEDIATORS

Results for H2:

What explains the relationship between frequency of

social media use and protest behavior?

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• Supported:

– H1. Frequency of social media use will be

positively related to protest behavior.

• Qualified support:

– H2. Using social media for news consumption,

opinion expression and activism mediates the

relationship between frequency of social media

use and protest behavior.

Hypotheses

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INTERVENING VARIABLES

“Effects” of social media onprotest behavior are indirect and contingent upon specific uses

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Directions for future research

• Replicate and test additional mechanisms.

• Examine others forms of participation.

• Triangulate survey data with:

– Content analysis of social media

– Social network analysis

– Longitudinal, panel surveys

• Cross-national comparative work

• DEVELOP THEORY!

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THANK YOU!

This presentation can be downloaded at

http:// www.slideshare.com/savalenz

Research work and papers are available at

http://uc-cl.academia.edu/Valenzuela