ABSTRACT

Information and communication technologies have transformed the dynamics of contention in contemporary society. Social networks such as Facebook and Twitter, and devices such as smartphones have increasingly played a central role in facilitating and mobilizing social movements throughout different parts of the world. Concurrently, the same technologies have been taken up by public authorities (including security agencies and the police) and have been used as surveillance tools to monitor and suppress the activities of certain demonstrators.

This book explores the complex and contradictory relationships between communication and information technologies and social movements by drawing on different case studies from around the world. The contributions analyse how new communication and information technologies impact the way protests are carried out and controlled in the current information age. The authors focus on recent events that date from the Arab Spring onwards and pose questions regarding the future of protests, surveillance and digital landscapes.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

Taking to the streets in the information age

part I|76 pages

Digital practices as part of social movement repertoires of contention

chapter 1|19 pages

Mobilisation and surveillance on social media

The ambivalent case of the anti-austerity protests in Spain (2011–2014)

chapter 2|16 pages

#RahmRepNow

Social media and the campaign to win reparations for Chicago police torture survivors, 2013–2015

chapter 3|17 pages

Cracks and reformations in the Brazilian mediascape

Mídia NINJA, radical citizen journalism, and resistance in Rio de Janeiro

chapter 4|22 pages

Applying privacy-enhancing technologies

One alternative future of protests

part II|74 pages

Control practices of policing and security agencies

chapter 5|18 pages

Settler colonial surveillance and the criminalization of social media

Contradictory implications for Palestinian resistance

chapter 6|20 pages

Between visibility and surveillance

Challenges to anti-corporate activism in social media

chapter 8|18 pages

Surveillance-ready-subjects

The making of Canadian anti-masking law