TY - JOUR
T1 - Deepening Democracy Through a Social Movement
T2 - Networks, Information Rights, and Online and Offline Activism
AU - RELLY, JEANNINE E.
AU - PAKANATI, RAJDEEP
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 (Jeannine E. Relly and Rajdeep Pakanati). Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives (by-nc-nd). All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - This research studied the dynamics of online and offline activism among networks of organizations and social activists across India involved in the globally recognized Right to Information movement. Our overarching research question examined how a network of organizations and activists grew global, national, and local collective action strength, outreach capacity, and recognition for their grassroots innovations online and offline in a landscape of digital inequality. This qualitative study, which used a purposive sample of activists and organization representatives (N = 72) and supplementary data, found that online activism increased in recent years; yet, the movement conducted most of its campaigns offline, with social media used to exercise geographic reach, amplify messaging, and pressure government and corporate interests. The movement built collective strength online and offline through unifying cross-cutting campaigns, innovations, and cross-network alliances with diverse constituents. It also sustained initiatives that built broad-based inclusive relationships across Indian society that became known around the world.
AB - This research studied the dynamics of online and offline activism among networks of organizations and social activists across India involved in the globally recognized Right to Information movement. Our overarching research question examined how a network of organizations and activists grew global, national, and local collective action strength, outreach capacity, and recognition for their grassroots innovations online and offline in a landscape of digital inequality. This qualitative study, which used a purposive sample of activists and organization representatives (N = 72) and supplementary data, found that online activism increased in recent years; yet, the movement conducted most of its campaigns offline, with social media used to exercise geographic reach, amplify messaging, and pressure government and corporate interests. The movement built collective strength online and offline through unifying cross-cutting campaigns, innovations, and cross-network alliances with diverse constituents. It also sustained initiatives that built broad-based inclusive relationships across Indian society that became known around the world.
KW - India
KW - digital inequality
KW - information rights
KW - online and offline activism
KW - social movements
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M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85099466723
SN - 1932-8036
VL - 14
SP - 4760
EP - 4780
JO - International Journal of Communication
JF - International Journal of Communication
ER -