ABSTRACT

This book is the essential guide for understanding how state power and politics are contested and exercised on social media. It brings together contributions by social media scholars who explore the connection of social media with revolutions, uprising, protests, power and counter-power, hacktivism, the state, policing and surveillance. It shows how collective action and state power are related and conflict as two dialectical sides of social media power, and how power and counter-power are distributed in this dialectic. Theoretically focused and empirically rigorous research considers the two-sided contradictory nature of power in relation to social media and politics. Chapters cover social media in the context of phenomena such as contemporary revolutions in Egypt and other countries, populism 2.0, anti-austerity protests, the fascist movement in Greece's crisis, Anonymous and police surveillance.

section |63 pages

Introductions

chapter |25 pages

Social Networking Sites in Pro-democracy and Anti-austerity Protests

Some Thoughts from a Social Movement Perspective1

section |42 pages

Global and Civil Counter-Power

chapter |21 pages

Populism 2.0

Social media activism, the generic Internet user and interactive direct democracy

chapter |19 pages

Anonymous

Hacktivism and Contemporary Politics

section |61 pages

Civil Counter-Power Against Austerity

chapter |22 pages

The Rise of Nazism and the Web

Social Media as Platforms of Racist Discourses in the Context of the Greek Economic Crisis

chapter |18 pages

More Than an Electronic Soapbox

Activist Web Presence as a Collective Action Frame, Newspaper Source and Police Surveillance Tool During the London G20 Protests in 2009

chapter |19 pages

Assemblages

Live Streaming Dissent in the ‘Quebec Spring'

section |38 pages

Contested and Toppled State Power

chapter |18 pages

Creating Spaces for Dissent

The Role of Social Media in the 2011 Egyptian Revolution

section |40 pages

State Power as Policing and Intelligence

chapter |18 pages

Vigilantism and Power Users

Police and User-Led Investigations on Social Media

chapter |20 pages

Police ‘Image Work' in an Era of Social Media

YouTube and the 2007 Montebello Summit Protest