TY - JOUR
T1 - Social media and the rise of digital activism among students in Nigeria
AU - Uwalaka, Temple
PY - 2019/12/1
Y1 - 2019/12/1
N2 - This study examines the impact of social media in the 2012 Occupy Nigeria protest in order to further understand the effect of digital technologies in the rise of digital activism among students in Nigeria. The researcher adopted a mixed methods approach in this paper, featuring two principal methods: (a) a purposive cross-sectional quantitative survey of media platforms used by student protestors (n=440) and (b) a semi-structured qualitative interviews on student protestors' experiences before, during and after the 2012 Occupy Nigeria protest (n=19). Our results indicate that social media (WhatsApp, 2go, Eskimi, Facebook, Badoo and YouTube) were used most by the protesters to plan, coordinate, mobilise for the 2012 Occupy Nigeria protest, and to document their participation in the protest. Of the platforms analysed, Facebook was the most used platform for protest purposes while Eskimi increased the likelihood that a student attended the first day of the 2012 Occupy Nigeria protest. This paper uncovers that social media were dependent on prevailing social connections between friends and families, and confirms that these applications are enhancing the relocation of politics from the parliament towards single-issue groups in the society.
AB - This study examines the impact of social media in the 2012 Occupy Nigeria protest in order to further understand the effect of digital technologies in the rise of digital activism among students in Nigeria. The researcher adopted a mixed methods approach in this paper, featuring two principal methods: (a) a purposive cross-sectional quantitative survey of media platforms used by student protestors (n=440) and (b) a semi-structured qualitative interviews on student protestors' experiences before, during and after the 2012 Occupy Nigeria protest (n=19). Our results indicate that social media (WhatsApp, 2go, Eskimi, Facebook, Badoo and YouTube) were used most by the protesters to plan, coordinate, mobilise for the 2012 Occupy Nigeria protest, and to document their participation in the protest. Of the platforms analysed, Facebook was the most used platform for protest purposes while Eskimi increased the likelihood that a student attended the first day of the 2012 Occupy Nigeria protest. This paper uncovers that social media were dependent on prevailing social connections between friends and families, and confirms that these applications are enhancing the relocation of politics from the parliament towards single-issue groups in the society.
KW - digital activism
KW - collective action
KW - connective action
KW - Occupy Nigeria
KW - social media
KW - social movement
UR - https://cgscholar.com/bookstore/cgrn/195/196
M3 - Article
VL - 11
SP - 1
EP - 13
JO - Journal of Communication and Media Research
JF - Journal of Communication and Media Research
IS - 2
ER -