Political Studies Article with James Dennis: ‘Social Media, Professional Media & Mobilisation in Contemporary Britain: Explaining the Strengths & Weaknesses of the Citizens’ Movement 38 Degrees’

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James Dennis and I have a new article out in Political Studies

Chadwick, A. and Dennis, J. (2016) ‘Social Media, Professional Media, and Mobilization in Contemporary Britain: Explaining the Strengths and Weaknesses of the Citizens’ Movement 38 Degrees’ Political Studies. Online First DOI:  10.1177/0032321716631350. pp. 1–19.

Abstract
Digital media continue to reshape political activism in unexpected ways. Within a period of a few years, the internet-enabled UK citizens’ movement 38 Degrees has amassed a membership of 3 million and now sits alongside similar entities such as America’s MoveOn, Australia’s GetUp! and the transnational movement Avaaz. In this article, we contribute to current thinking about digital media and mobilisation by addressing some of the limitations of existing research on these movements and on digital activism more generally. We show how 38 Degrees’ digital network repertoires coexist interdependently with its strategy of gaining professional news media coverage. We explain how the oscillations between choreographic leadership and member influence and between digital media horizontalism and elite media-centric work constitute the space of interdependencies in which 38 Degrees acts. These delicately balanced relations can quickly dissolve and be replaced by simpler relations of dependence on professional media. Yet despite its fragility, we theorise about how 38 Degrees may boost individuals’ political efficacy, irrespective of the outcome of individual campaigns. Our conceptual framework can be used to guide research on similar movements.

Keywords
mobilisation, activism, engagement, social movements, social media, journalism

Happy reading! :-)