Protests against # delhigangrape on Twitter : Analyzing India ’ s Arab Spring

This study offers a comprehensive approach towards analyzing and explaining the role of Twitter in shaping and facilitating social movements especially during protests. It presents automatic and manual analyses of the tweet themes, usage characteristics and major Twitter users during a public outcry against a gangrape incident in Delhi, the capital city of India. Our results identified Twitter as an important channel for the diffusion of ideas and news among a vast set of adopters in defiance of geographical boundaries. Results of the content analyses highlight the prominent use of social media resources in disseminating information on Twitter, and the remarkable role of Twitter users as citizen journalists during the days of the protest. Results of the social network analysis suggest that major role players on Twitter were the offline protest leaders.

[1]  David Schweingruber Mob Sociology and Escalated Force: Sociology's Contribution to Repressive Police Tactics , 2000 .

[2]  The Power of Pictures , 2012 .

[3]  D. Strang,et al.  DIFFUSION IN ORGANIZATIONS AND SOCIAL MOVEMENTS: From Hybrid Corn to Poison Pills , 1998 .

[4]  M. Skoric The digital origins of dictatorship and democracy: information technology and political Islam , 2011 .

[5]  Charles Tilly,et al.  Popular Contention in Great Britain, 1758-1834. , 1996 .

[6]  H. Kritzer Political Protest and Political Violence: A Nonrecursive Causal Model , 1977 .

[7]  M. Lavalette,et al.  Leadership and Social Movements , 2001 .

[8]  K. O’Brien,et al.  Protest Leadership in Rural China* , 2007, The China Quarterly.

[9]  S. Allan,et al.  Citizen journalism: global perspectives , 2009 .

[10]  Marko M. Skoric,et al.  Online Organization of an Offline Protest: From Social to Traditional Media and Back , 2011, 2011 44th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences.

[11]  Peter Hedström,et al.  Mesolevel Networks and the Diffusion of Social Movements: The Case of the Swedish Social Democratic Party1 , 2000, American Journal of Sociology.

[12]  Priscilla Murphy,et al.  The Leader as the Face of a Crisis: Philip Morris' CEO's Speeches During the 1990s , 2009 .

[13]  D. Porta,et al.  Policing Protest: The Control of Mass Demonstrations in Western Democracies , 1998 .

[14]  Kristina Lerman,et al.  Information Contagion: An Empirical Study of the Spread of News on Digg and Twitter Social Networks , 2010, ICWSM.

[15]  江藤 文夫 World Report on Disability 2011を読む(第2回)世界の障害者人口と統計手法をめぐって , 2013 .

[16]  Sharon Meraz,et al.  Is There an Elite Hold? Traditional Media to Social Media Agenda Setting Influence in Blog Networks , 2009, J. Comput. Mediat. Commun..

[17]  J. Wiest,et al.  The Arab Spring| Social Media in the Egyptian Revolution: Reconsidering Resource Mobilization Theory , 2011 .

[18]  P. Howard,et al.  Opening Closed Regimes: What Was the Role of Social Media During the Arab Spring? , 2011 .

[19]  Cory L. Armstrong,et al.  Now Tweet This: How News Organizations Use Twitter , 2010 .

[20]  Thomas J. Johnson,et al.  The Arab Spring| Overthrowing the Protest Paradigm? How The New York Times, Global Voices and Twitter Covered the Egyptian Revolution , 2011 .

[21]  A. Hermida TWITTERING THE NEWS , 2010 .

[22]  Halim Rane,et al.  Social media, social movements and the diffusion of ideas in the Arab uprisings , 2012 .

[23]  Hongfei Yan,et al.  Comparing Twitter and Traditional Media Using Topic Models , 2011, ECIR.

[24]  Nicholas W. Jankowski,et al.  Traditional news media online: An examination of added values , 2000 .

[25]  Clay Shirky The political power of social media: Technology, the public sphere, and political change , 2011 .

[26]  Alex Burns,et al.  Twitter free Iran: An evaluation of Twitter's role in public diplomacy and information operations in Iran's 2009 election crisis , 2009 .

[27]  P. A. J. Waddington,et al.  Police (Canteen) Sub-Culture. An Appreciation , 1999 .

[28]  Maria de Fatima Oliveira,et al.  Affective News and Networked Publics: The Rhythms of News Storytelling on #Egypt , 2012 .

[29]  Hosung Park,et al.  What is Twitter, a social network or a news media? , 2010, WWW '10.

[30]  Axel Philipps Visual protest material as empirical data , 2012 .

[31]  M. Diani,et al.  Social Movements: An Introduction , 1998 .

[32]  Marko Papic,et al.  Social Media as a Tool for Protest , 2011 .

[33]  M. Diani SOCIAL MOVEMENT NETWORKS VIRTUAL AND REAL , 2000 .

[34]  B. Loader,et al.  Cyberprotest: New Media, Citizens and Social Movements , 2004 .

[35]  Thomas J. Johnson,et al.  Wag the Blog: How Reliance on Traditional Media and the Internet Influence Credibility Perceptions of Weblogs Among Blog Users , 2004 .

[36]  Amr Hamzawy,et al.  Protest Movements and Political Change in the Arab World , 2011 .

[37]  I. Balbus The Dialectics of Legal Repression: Black Rebels Before the American Criminal Courts , 1973 .

[38]  Vincent Boudreau Resisting Dictatorship: Repression and Protest in Southeast Asia , 2004 .

[39]  Isabell M. Welpe,et al.  Predicting Elections with Twitter: What 140 Characters Reveal about Political Sentiment , 2010, ICWSM.

[40]  Ruud Koopmans,et al.  The dynamics of protest waves: West Germany, 1965 to 1989 , 1993 .

[41]  Mohan J. Dutta-Bergman Complementarity in Consumption of News Types Across Traditional and New Media , 2004 .

[42]  Zeynep Tufekci,et al.  Social Media and the Decision to Participate in Political Protest: Observations From Tahrir Square , 2012 .

[43]  Jackie Smith,et al.  Globalizing Resistance: The Battle of Seattle and the Future of Social Movements , 2001 .

[44]  W. Grant,et al.  Digital Dialogue? Australian Politicians' use of the Social Network Tool Twitter , 2010 .

[45]  R. Garrett,et al.  Protest in an Information Society: a review of literature on social movements and new ICTs , 2006 .

[46]  Patrick Paroubek,et al.  Twitter as a Corpus for Sentiment Analysis and Opinion Mining , 2010, LREC.

[47]  Andrei Shleifer,et al.  Who Owns the Media?* , 2001, The Journal of Law and Economics.

[48]  Leysia Palen,et al.  Twitter adoption and use in mass convergence and emergency events , 2009 .

[49]  Doug McAdam,et al.  The Cross-National Diffusion of Movement Ideas , 1993 .

[50]  Scott A. Longwell,et al.  TWITTER AND DISASTERS , 2013 .

[51]  Malcolm R. Parks,et al.  Social Media and Political Change: Capacity, Constraint, and Consequence , 2012 .

[52]  Eric Berger This Sentence Easily Would Fit on Twitter: Emergency Physicians Are Learning to “Tweet” , 2009 .

[53]  Barry Smyth,et al.  Terms of a Feather: Content-Based News Recommendation and Discovery Using Twitter , 2011, ECIR.

[54]  Ee-Peng Lim,et al.  Tweets and Votes: A Study of the 2011 Singapore General Election , 2012, 2012 45th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences.

[55]  Carmen Holotescu,et al.  CAN WE USE TWITTER FOR EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITIES , 2008 .

[56]  Saifuddin Ahmed,et al.  The Role of the Media during Communal Riots in India , 2010 .

[57]  Lisa Anderson,et al.  Demystifying the Arab Spring Parsing the Differences Between Tunisia , Egypt , and Libya , 2011 .

[58]  Brendan T. O'Connor,et al.  From Tweets to Polls: Linking Text Sentiment to Public Opinion Time Series , 2010, ICWSM.

[59]  Steven R. Corman,et al.  Studying Complex Discursive Systems: Centering Resonance Analysis of Communication. , 2002 .

[60]  Bibi van der Zee Twitter Triumphs , 2009 .

[61]  Dan Wang,et al.  Social Movement Organizational Collaboration: Networks of Learning and the Diffusion of Protest Tactics, 1960–19951 , 2012, American Journal of Sociology.

[62]  S. Chabot,et al.  Globalization and transnational diffusion between social movements: Reconceptualizing the dissemination of the Gandhian repertoire and the “coming out” routine , 2002 .

[63]  Douglas M. McLeod,et al.  The Manufacture of `Public Opinion' by Reporters: Informal Cues for Public Perceptions of Protest Groups , 1992 .

[64]  A. Ahmad Is Twitter a useful tool for journalists? , 2010 .

[65]  W. Bennett,et al.  Social Media and the Organization of Collective Action: Using Twitter to Explore the Ecologies of Two Climate Change Protests , 2011 .

[66]  Kartikeya Bajpai,et al.  A framework for analyzing collective action events on Twitter , 2011, ISCRAM.

[67]  Luis A. Fernandez Policing Dissent: Social Control and the Anti-Globalization Movement , 2008 .

[68]  Kokil Jaidka,et al.  Protests against #delhigangrape on Twitter: Analyzing India's Arab Spring , 2013 .