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Full Description
The book examines the highly dynamic communication ecology of recent contentious politics and its expanding digital footprint. First, it looks at the attainment of democratic citizenship through practice as street protests attract substantial numbers of followers who narrate their involvement or reflect on the claims and the implications of collective action on social media. Secondly, it considers the ramifications for contemporary democracy arising from the large-scale uptake of social media by variegated protest networks, which no longer pivot on the coordination capacity of bureaucratic movement organizations. The book ties these aspects together to propose that contentious politics can be a fertile ground for progressive civic participation.
Contents
Introduction: The Networked Communication of Contentious Politics.- Chapter 2. The Protest Events.- Chapter 3. Digital Prefigurative Participation.- Chapter 4. Casual Protestors.- Chapter 5. Organisational Form.- Chapter 6. Participatory Coordination.- Chapter 7. Informal Civic Learning.- Conclusion: Civic Participation in Contentious Politics.