Serial activists: Political Twitter beyond influentials and the twittertariat

This article introduces a group of politically charged Twitter users that deviates from elite and ordinary users. After mining 20 M tweets related to nearly 200 instances of political protest from 2009 to 2013, we identified a network of individuals tweeting across geographically distant protest hashtags and revisited the term “serial activists.” We contacted 191 individuals and conducted 21 in-depth, semi-structured interviews thematically coded to provide a typology of serial activists and their struggles with institutionalized power. We found that these users have an ordinary following, but bridge disparate language communities and facilitate collective action by virtue of their dedication to multiple causes. Serial activists differ from influentials or traditional grassroots activists and their activity challenges Twitter scholarship foregrounding the two-step flow model of communication. The results add a much needed depth to the prevalent data-driven treatment of political Twitter by describing a class of extraordinarily prolific users beyond influentials and the twittertariat.

[1]  W. Bennett,et al.  Response to Sidney Tarrow’s review of The Logic of Connective Action: Digital Media and the Personalization of Contentious Politics , 2013, Perspectives on Politics.

[2]  B MilesMatthew,et al.  Qualitative Data Analysis , 2009, Approaches and Processes of Social Science Research.

[3]  S. Keeter,et al.  A New Engagement , 2006 .

[4]  R. Dalton Citizen Politics: Public Opinion and Political Parties in Advanced Industrial Democracies , 1996 .

[5]  Zizi Papacharissi Affective News and Networked Publics , 2014 .

[6]  Anders Olof Larsson,et al.  Studying political microblogging: Twitter users in the 2010 Swedish election campaign , 2012, New Media Soc..

[7]  Laurence Cox,et al.  Review: Donatella della Porta. Can Democracy be Saved? Participation, Deliberation and Social Movements. Cambridge and Malden, MA: Polity, 2013. $69.95 hardcover / $24.95 paperback , 2014 .

[8]  M. Castells Communication Power: Mass Communication, Mass Self-Communication and Power Relationships in the Network Society , 2009, Media and Society.

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

[10]  Andrew J. Flanagin,et al.  Modeling the Structure of Collective Action , 2006 .

[11]  Richard E. Boyatzis,et al.  Transforming Qualitative Information: Thematic Analysis and Code Development , 1998 .

[12]  Cornelius Puschmann,et al.  Tweeting across hashtags: overlapping users and the importance of language, topics, and politics , 2013, HT.

[13]  Zeynep Tufekci The Medium and the Movement: Digital Tools, Social Movement Politics, and the End of the Free Rider Problem , 2014 .

[14]  B. Loader,et al.  NETWORKING DEMOCRACY? , 2011 .

[15]  E. Katz The Two-Step Flow of Communication: An Up-To-Date Report on an Hypothesis , 1957 .

[16]  S. Keeter,et al.  A New Engagement?: Political Participation, Civic Life, and the Changing American Citizen , 2006 .

[17]  Sidney Tarrow,et al.  The New Transnational Activism , 2005 .

[18]  Yamir Moreno,et al.  The Dynamics of Protest Recruitment through an Online Network , 2011, Scientific reports.

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

[20]  Arnaud Legout,et al.  Studying social networks at scale: macroscopic anatomy of the twitter social graph , 2014, SIGMETRICS '14.

[21]  Duncan J. Watts,et al.  Who says what to whom on twitter , 2011, WWW.

[22]  Filippo Trevisan,et al.  Ethical dilemmas in researching sensitive issues online: lessons from the study of British disability dissent networks , 2014 .

[23]  Rafael L. G. Raimundo,et al.  Gatekeeping Twitter: message diffusion in political hashtags , 2013 .

[24]  Ethan Zuckerman New Media, New Civics?: New Media, New Civics? , 2014 .

[25]  Stefaan Walgrave,et al.  TRANSNATIONAL COLLECTIVE IDENTIFICATION: MAY DAY AND CLIMATE CHANGE PROTESTERS' IDENTIFICATION WITH SIMILAR PROTEST EVENTS IN OTHER COUNTRIES * , 2012 .

[26]  P. Howard,et al.  Democracy's Fourth Wave?: Digital Media and the Arab Spring , 2013 .

[27]  Natalie Fenton,et al.  Alternative Media and Social Networking Sites: The Politics of Individuation and Political Participation , 2011 .

[28]  Joel Penney,et al.  (Re)Tweeting in the service of protest: Digital composition and circulation in the Occupy Wall Street movement , 2014, New Media Soc..

[29]  Duncan J. Watts,et al.  Everyone's an influencer: quantifying influence on twitter , 2011, WSDM '11.

[30]  Raleigh North Haewoon, Kwak, Changhyun, Lee, Park, Hosung, and Moon, Sue. . What is Twitter, a Social Network or a News Media?. 19th International World Wide Web (WWW) Conference.April. , 2010 .

[31]  Peter Dahlgren Doing citizenship , 2006 .

[32]  Brigitte Geissel,et al.  Can Democracy Be Saved? Participation, Deliberation and Social Movements , 2015 .

[33]  Fang Wu,et al.  Social Networks that Matter: Twitter Under the Microscope , 2008, First Monday.

[34]  Michele Micheletti Political virtue and shopping : individuals, consumerism, and collective action , 2003 .

[35]  Jayson Harsin WTF was Kony 2012? Considerations for Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies (CCCS) , 2013 .

[36]  Yamir Moreno,et al.  Broadcasters and Hidden Influentials in Online Protest Diffusion , 2012, ArXiv.

[37]  S. Sieber The Integration of Fieldwork and Survey Methods , 1973, American Journal of Sociology.

[38]  Deen Freelon,et al.  Of big birds and bayonets: hybrid Twitter interactivity in the 2012 Presidential debates , 2015 .

[39]  P. Norris,et al.  E-Politics? the Impact of the Internet on Political Trust and Participation , 2004 .

[40]  Thomas R. Lindlof Qualitative Communication Research Methods , 1994 .

[41]  D. Boyd,et al.  CRITICAL QUESTIONS FOR BIG DATA , 2012 .

[42]  Deen Freelon Online Civic Activism: Where Does It Fit?: Online Civic Activism: Where Does It Fit? , 2014 .

[43]  Krishna P. Gummadi,et al.  Measuring User Influence in Twitter: The Million Follower Fallacy , 2010, ICWSM.

[44]  Pippa Norris,et al.  Democratic Phoenix: Reinventing Political Activism , 2002 .

[45]  Dan Mercea,et al.  Towards a Conceptualization of Casual Protest Participation , 2014 .

[46]  Ariadna Fernandez-Planells,et al.  Communication among young people in the #spanishrevolution: Uses of online–offline tools to obtain information about the #acampadabcn , 2014, New Media Soc..

[47]  Rizal Setya Perdana What is Twitter , 2013 .