Hashtags
Tweets Protest
Social
Movements in the Digital Age
Annual
conference of the Institute for Social Movement Studies in co-operation with
the Weizenbaum Institute for the Networked Society
15/16.
November 2019, Weizenbaum-Institut
Hardenbergstraße
32, 10623 Berlin
Today,
protest and counter-protest, rule and resistance can only be thought of in the
context of a digitized society, its particular opportunities, dynamics and
challenges.
Digital
communication determines our everyday life and the ways we inform, argue and
express ourselves. Hashtags, Instagram Stories and YouTube videos are not only
used today for self-por-trayal, they are also central to collective action and
political commitment. Protests at least have the potential to become globally
visible through digital communication through images, tweets and streams. There
are increasing numbers of digital movement entrepreneurs combining financial
and political interests, who have a head start in the competition for attention
on the Internet.
Digital
interactions change our social relationships and thus also the form and
functioning of social movements and protests. The digital context allows
mobilizations to be initiated with less orga-nizational effort; to participate
is sometimes just a click away. Movements, only become visible and responsive
through their digital work: as mass movements, they require digital
co-ordination. This can turn power relations upside down. Thus, movements and
marginalized groups have new opportunities to articulate their ideas and
interests. And yet, the question arises which concerns and organizational
methods benefit most from the digital sphere – and which lose the struggle for
attention.
Recently,
we have become aware of other downsides of digital organization: digital hate
cultures. They use commercial platforms to disguise supremacist ideologies and
set up their own forums where they co-ordinate political campaigns and attacks
on political opponents.
There is
more surveillance and automation is increasing. Thus, the digital constellation
harbors dangers such as isolation, repression, stigmatization, slander and
censorship as well as an opportunity structure for right-wing actors – and for
resistance from progressive civil society. In all cases, social networks create
transregional public spheres that are indispensable and that influence politics
and its cultural foundations.
This year‘s
annual conference of the Institute for Social Movement Studies is dedicated to
the challenges and opportunities for protest and movements in the digital age.
Together,
we ask: How do we understand protest in the digital context? How do
organization and mobilization differ and complement one another online and
offline? Does the structure of digital platforms have benefits for particularly
reactionary movements? How can digital spaces strengthen emancipatory policy
approaches? What methodological and empirical challenges are associa¬ted with
research into movements and protest on the Internet? Possible contributions
include, but are not limited to, the following topics:
- Online-offline interactions: mechanisms and processes
- Mobilization via platforms (messengers, image boards, video platforms, deep web)
- Movement entrepreneurship in the Internet
- Visual strategies (memes, GIFs, videos)
- Internet movements and ‘digital (movement) parties’
- Online subcultures and their influence on the political mainstream
- Digital repression and surveillance by state actors
- Spatial production and spatial understanding in a digital context
- Hate speech, filter bubbles, echo chamber, algorithms and their anti-democratic dangers
- Civil Society 2.0: Digital street work, solidarity and counter hegemony
- Practices that explicitly reject the digital and their challenges
- Methodological challenges, ethical research questions and approaches to research
- Transnational community building via digital platforms (movements and diaspora activism)
- Targeted manipulation of political discourses and opinions
- New forms of organization, digital repertoires and campaigns
- Theoretical contributions to protest, digitalization and surveillance capitalism
The
conference languages are German and English. The conference invites alternative
forms of presentation, such as performances or exhibitions, and activist
contributions. We encourage especially young researchers and women to register.
The aim is to publish selected contributions in German and English. Abstracts
for individual contributions (max. 250 words) or panel proposals with up to
four paper abstracts must be submitted by 26 July 2019 at:
konferenz2019@protestinstitut.eu
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