Bibliography: Social Movements and social media
Further reading
- Billingham, P. and Parr, T., 2020. Enforcing social norms: the morality of public shaming. European Journal of Philosophy, 28(4), pp. 997–1016.
- Direk, Z., 2020. Politics of shame in Turkey: public shaming and mourning, Sophia, 59(1), pp. 39–56.
- Earl, J. (2016) ‘Protest Online. Theorising the Consequences of Online Engagement’, in L. Bosi, M. Giugni and K. Uba (eds) The Consequences of Social Movements. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 363–400.
- Eckert, S. and Metzger-Riftkin, J., 2020. Doxxing. In K. Ross, I. Bachmann, V. Cardo, S. Moorti and M. Scarcelli, eds. The International Encyclopedia of Gender, Media, and Communication. New York: John Wiley & Sons, pp. 1–5.
- Gerbaudo, P. & Trere, E. (2015) ‘In Search of the “We” of Social Media Activism: Introduction to the Special Issue on Social Media and Protest Identities’, Information, Communication & Society, vol. 18, no. 8, pp. 865–71.
- Mattoni, A. & Odilla, F. (2021). Digital Media, Activism, and Social Movements' Outcomes in the Policy Arena. The Case of Two Anti-Corruption Mobilizations in Brazil. Partecipazione & Conflitto 14 (3): 1127-1150.
- Mielczarek, N., 2018. The ‘pepper-spraying cop’ icon and its internet memes: social justice and public shaming through rhetorical transformation in digital culture. Visual Communication Quarterly, 25(2), pp. 67–81.
- Morozov, E. (2009) ‘Why Promoting Democracy via the Internet Is Often Not a Good Idea’, Foreign Policy, 24 April.
- Pavan, E. (2017). ‘The Integrative Power of Online Collective Action Networks beyond Protest. Exploring Social Media Use in the Process of Institutionalization’, Social Movement Studies, vol. 16, no. 4, pp. 433–46.
- Pundak, C., Steinhart, Y. and Goldenberg, J., 2021. Nonmaleficence in shaming: the ethical dilemma underlying participation in online public shaming. Journal of Consumer Psychology, 31(3), pp. 478–500.
- Ronson, J., 2015. So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed. London: Riverhead Books.