What role does the Internet play in mobilizing participants in days of action? Although most research has focused on theway that computer-mediated communication is changing transnational collective action, it is unclear how social movement reliance on this new form of communication is modifying protest within nation-states. This paper analyses how participants in a national day of action in the United States were mobilized, focusing on the role that the Internet played. We find that a very high percentage of participants in all cities heard about the day of action through e-mail lists or websites. Those who mobilized through the Internet, however, were very different from those who mobilized through personal and organizational ties. In particular, the participants who heard about the event through all channels ofmediated communication – including the Internet – weremuchmore likely to come to the event alone than those who heard about it through their social networks.The paper concludes by discussing the implications of our findings to collective action and civic participation in the digital age
CITATION STYLE
Fisher, D. R., & Boekkooi, M. (2010). MOBILIZING FRIENDS AND STRANGERS. Information, Communication & Society, 13(2), 193–208. https://doi.org/10.1080/13691180902878385
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