Description |
1 online resource (31 pages) : color illustrations. |
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text txt rdacontent |
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computer c rdamedia |
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online resource cr rdacarrier |
Series |
Peaceworks ; no. 65 |
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Peaceworks ; no. 65.
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Note |
Title from title screen (viewed on October 7, 2010). |
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"August 2010." |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 28-31). |
Contents |
Summary -- Introduction -- Improving the analysis of new media and contentious politics -- The political effects of new media : five levels of analysis -- Illustrating the approach : Iran -- Conclusions and further directions. |
Summary |
In this report from the United States Institute of Peace's Centers of Innovation for Science, Technology, and Peacebuilding, and Media, Conflict, and Peacebuilding, a team of scholars from The George Washington University, in cooperation with scholars from Harvard University and Morningside Analytics, critically assesses both the "cyberutopian" and "cyberskeptic" perspectives on the impact of new media on political movements. The authors propose a more complex approach that looks at the role of new media in contentious politics from five interlocking levels of analysis: individual transformation, intergroup relations, collective action, regime policies, and external attention. |
Subject |
Mass media -- Political aspects.
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Online social networks -- Political aspects.
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Blogs -- Political aspects.
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Political participation.
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Added Author |
Aday, Sean.
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United States Institute of Peace.
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George Washington University.
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Harvard University.
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Added Title |
New media in contentious politics |
Gpo Item No. |
1063-K-11 (online) |
Sudoc No. |
Y 3.P 31:19/NO.65 |
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