How diverse users and activities trigger connective action via social media: Lessons from the Twitter hashtag campaign #Ilooklikeanengineer

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Abstract

We present a study that examines how a social media activism campaign aimed at improving gender diversity within engineering gained and maintained momentum in its early period. We examined over 50,000 Tweets posted over the first ~75 days of the #ILookLikeAnEngineer campaign and found that diverse participation – of types of users – increased activity at crucial moments. We categorize these triggers into four types: 1) Event-Driven: Alignment of the campaign with offline events related to the issue (Diversity SFO, Disrupt, etc.); 2) Media-Driven: News coverage of the events in the media (TechCrunch, CNN, BBC, etc.); 3) Industry-Driven: Web participation in the campaign by large organizations (Microsoft, Tesla, GE, Cisco, etc.); and 4) Personality-Driven: Alignment of the events with popular and/or known personalities (e.g. Isis Anchalee; Michelle Sun; Ada Lovelace.) This study illustrates how one mechanism – triggering – supports connective action in social media campaign.

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APA

Johri, A., Karbasian, H., Malik, A., Handa, R., & Purohit, H. (2018). How diverse users and activities trigger connective action via social media: Lessons from the Twitter hashtag campaign #Ilooklikeanengineer. In Proceedings of the Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (Vol. 2018-January, pp. 2183–2192). IEEE Computer Society. https://doi.org/10.24251/hicss.2018.273

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