ABSTRACT

Global movements and protests from the Arab Spring to the Occupy Movement have been attributed to growing access to social media, while without it, local causes like #bringbackourgirls and the ice bucket challenge may have otherwise remained unheard and unseen.

Regardless of their nature – advocacy, activism, protest or dissent – and beyond the technological ability of digital and social media to connect support, these major events have all been the results of excellent communication and public relations. But PR remains seen only as the defender of corporate and capitalist interests, and therefore resistant to outside voices such as activists, NGOs, union members, protesters and whistle-blowers.

Drawing on contributions from around the world to examine the concepts and practice of "activist," "protest" and "dissent" public relations, this book challenges this view. Using a range of international examples, it explores the changing nature of protest and its relationship with PR and provides a radical analysis of the communication strategies and tactics of social movements and activist groups and their campaigns. This thought-provoking collection will be of interest to researchers and advanced students of public relations, strategic communication, political science, politics, journalism, marketing, and advertising, and also to PR professionals in think tanks and NGOs.

chapter |11 pages

Protest public relations

Communicating dissent and activism – an introduction

chapter 1|17 pages

The slow conflation of public relations and activism

Understanding trajectories in public relations theorising

chapter 2|15 pages

Activist nation

Australia and the 1916 conscription referendum

chapter 3|21 pages

Activists as pioneers in PR

Historical frameworks and the suffragette movement

chapter 5|19 pages

Public relations for social change

Shock tactics in feminist activism in Eastern Europe

chapter 6|22 pages

Protesting the homeland

Diaspora dissent public relations efforts to oppose the Dominican Republic’s citizenship policies

chapter 9|15 pages

Archiving activism and/as activist PR

Occupy Wall Street and the politics of influence

chapter 10|20 pages

Romania’s protest

From stakeholders in waiting to activists’ becoming PR practitioners

chapter 11|17 pages

Activist PR in Vietnam

Public participation via Facebook to save 6,700 trees

chapter 12|26 pages

The beginning of the end

Telling the story of Occupy Wall Street’s eviction on Twitter

chapter 13|14 pages

Activist public relations

Moving from frames as objects to framing as a dynamic process

chapter 14|17 pages

Digital media, journalism, PR, and grassroots power

Theoretical perspectives