E-Petitioning and Online Media: The Case of #BringBackOurGirls

T. M. Harrison, Catherine L. Dumas, Nic DePaula, Tim Fake, William May, Akanksha Atrey, Jooyeon Lee, Lokesh Rishi, S. Ravi
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

E-petitioning, a genre of technology-based collective action tools, makes it possible for members of the public to address government decision makers directly with their requests for action. In this paper we use time series analysis to explore the effects of Twitter and other forms of online media on the accumulation of signatures in e-petitioning. We explore the case of "Bring Back Our Girls," a Change.org petition initiated in spring 2014 following the abduction of 276 female students from a school in Chibok, Nigeria by heavily armed members of an Islamic extremist group. The petition targeted government leaders around the world. We found evidence that tweeting and certain forms of online media are related to the likelihood of individuals signing an e-petition, providing evidence of a hybrid media system in which diverse forms of online media behave with diverse logics and impacts in their effects on e-petitions.
电子请愿与网络媒体:#把我们的女孩带回来#
电子请愿是一种以技术为基础的集体行动工具,它使公众能够直接向政府决策者提出行动请求。本文运用时间序列分析,探讨推特与其他网路媒体对电子请愿签名累积的影响。2014年春天,在尼日利亚奇博克一所学校276名女学生被一个伊斯兰极端组织全副武装的成员绑架后,Change.org网站发起了“把我们的女孩带回来”的请愿活动。请愿书的目标是世界各地的政府领导人。我们发现有证据表明,推特和某些形式的网络媒体与个人签署电子请愿书的可能性有关,这为混合媒体系统提供了证据,在混合媒体系统中,不同形式的网络媒体以不同的逻辑和影响对电子请愿书的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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