1,721,024 research outputs found
Appendice. Che cos’è e come funziona Issue Crawler
Questa Appendice riprende contributi precedentemente sviluppati nell’ambito del progetto «Diritti di comunicazione tra locale e globale: reti di movimento e trasformazione dei processi di governance» (PRIN 2006) da Claudia Padovani, Elena Pavan e Matteo Cernison
sj-docx-1-nms-10.1177_14614448231160706 – Supplemental material for “We hate her . . . and you too”: Polarized intersectionality in Italy throughout changing political scenarios
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-nms-10.1177_14614448231160706 for “We hate her . . . and you too”: Polarized intersectionality in Italy throughout changing political scenarios by Antonio Martella and Elena Pavan in New Media & Society</p
Digital Media and Knowledge Production Within Social Movements: Insights From the Transition Movement in Italy
In this article, we aim at contributing to ongoing discussions on the nexus between digital media and social movements. We investigate how activists problematize the inclusion of digital media within their courses of action and exploit these tools to produce and diffuse alternative knowledge on the issues on which they mobilize. We do so by studying Transition Italia (TI), the Italian hub of the transnational Transition movement struggling for resilience and sustainability. First, we reconstruct how activists problematized the adoption of digital media within TI’s courses of action. Second, we explore how activists leveraged Facebook affordances to produce and diffuse alternative knowledge on TI as a collective actor, its visions and practices, its action networks, and the political alternatives it aims to achieve. Far from being passive adopters of digital media, activists considered critically the inclusion of digital media within TI’s activities in light of three elements of import ..
Fra reti tematiche e reti sociali. Un ritratto delle mobilitazioni sui diritti di comunicazione in Italia
i processi e gli strumen- ti del comunicare, incluse le nuove tecnologie, sono intesi sia come stru- mento a sostegno dell’azione collettiva sia come oggetto delle rivendicazio- ni. Processi e strumenti del comunicare diventano un campo di azione col- lettiva nella riflessione sulle sfide poste dalle nuove tecnologie, nell’elabora- zione di modelli di comunicazione alternativi e nelle pratiche di utilizzo de- gli strumenti. Ciò genera una particolare interazione fra processi e contenu- ti delle mobilitazioni; una situazione in cui diventa interessante esaminare se i principi di libertà, diversità, inclusione e condivisione affermati dagli attivisti sono tradotti in pratiche di comunicazione orizzontali, plurali, demo- cratiche. L’accento non è tanto sui «media» che vengono utilizzati, ma sulle «mediazioni» e sulla misura in cui queste pratiche contribuiscono a dare forma alle reti di movimento e a definirne l’agenda politica
Medicina 2.0: comunicare la salute attraverso i social media
Il testo, ricco di spunti teorici e di casi pratici, tratta dell’uso reale e degli usi possibili dei social media da parte di medici ed operatori sanitari. Il percorso indica gli strumenti e i metodi più adeguati per interagire strategicamente con i colleghi, con i pazienti e con il pubblico generale sul web 2.0, con particolare riferimento a Facebook, Twitter ed i blog. Attraverso un’analisi delle pratiche dei professionisti medico-sanitari in Italia, negli Stati Uniti ed in altri paesi, le autrici indicano i metodi per migliorare le prestazioni nei micro-contesti di interazione quotidiana, basandosi sull’uso individuale e di squadra di strumenti che li proiettano nel web 2.0, permettendo loro dialogare, di informarsi e di informare. Il quadro teorico di riferimento sarà nuovo per molti dei professionisti che sceglieranno di ottenere dei crediti ECM con questo percorso. Le autrici fanno riferimento ai loro studi in sociologia per parlare di comunicazione e di interazioni e da questa prospettiva commenteranno i dati sull’uso dei social media tra gli italiani per poi approfondire il tema della salute sia dal punto di vista dei medici e degli operatori sanitari sia da quello dei pazienti.
Indice
INTRODUZIONE
CAPITOLO 1 - Diffusione dei social media dentro e fuori la professione medico-sanitaria
CAPITOLO 2 - Conoscere i social media
CAPITOLO 3 - L'allenamento, gli schemi di gioco, le regole del gioco
CAPITOLO 4 – Comunicare la salute in modo strategico via social media
CONCLUSIONI
BIBLIOGRAFIA
APPENDIC
Appendix - Close ever, distant never? Integrating protest event and social network approaches into the transformation of the Hungarian far right
Appendix for Close ever, distant never? Integrating protest event and social network approaches into the transformation of the Hungarian far right by Andrea LP Pirro, Elena Pavan, Adam Fagan and David Gazsi in Party Politics</p
Activist media practices, alternative media and online digital traces: The case of YouTube in the Italian Se non ora, quando? movement
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Networks and Power in Gender-oriented Communication Governance: linking theory to empirical exploration
This chapter focuses on the need to rethink the way “power” is conceptualized in the global
context by elaborating – theoretically and in view of empirical investigations – on the different, competing and interrelated forms of power exerted by different actors in the networked governance of global communications, with a particular emphasis on Gender- oriented Communication Governance. The authors identify the theoretical assumptions that underpin different re-conceptualizations of power, and outline the core components of an analytical framework to investigate power dynamics in contemporary global governance, suggesting how such framework can fruitfully be applied to the specific sector of global communication governance that pertain to the nexus between women and media, in view of promoting gender-aware social change. Understood as the coming together of network configurations of different actors, whose interactions should be investigated in
their social as well as semantic dimensions while focusing on both offline relations and online exchanges, Gender-oriented Communication Governance offers the opportunity to introduce a methodological proposal on how to connect reflections on power with the analysis of networked politics
Global Governance and ICTs: Exploring online governance networks around Gender and Media
In this article, we address transformations in global governance brought about by information and communication technologies (ICTs). Focusing on the specific domain of “gender-oriented communication governance” we investigate online interactions amongst different kinds of actors active in promoting gender equity in and through the media. By tracing and analyzing online issue networks, we investigate which actors are capable of influencing the framing of issues and of structuring discursive practices. From the analysis, different forms of power emerge, reflecting diverse modes of engaging in online interactions, where actors can operate as network ‘programmers’, ‘mobilizers’, or ‘switchers’. Our case study suggests that, often, old ways of conceiving actors’ interactions accompany the implementation of new communication tools; while the availability of a pervasive networked infrastructure does not automatically translate into meaningful interactions amongst all relevant actors in a specific domain
The emerging Movement on Communication Rights: a New Stakeholder in Global Communication Governance
In this article we address a number of specific questions:
Has a global mobilization dynamic developed around communication issues in the early 2000s? What has the WSIS process, and civil society participation within it, shown in terms of framing the communication rights discourse? What encounters and events have contributed to a common vision, strategy and shared identity for this emerging movement? Through which methods and conceptual lenses can researchers investigate these phenomena to gain a better understanding of their potential impact on global processes?
Our ultimate aim is to assess the relevance of this specific event as a step in the evolution of contemporary mobilizations around communication rights, considering civil society as a “stakeholder” in global communication governance for the 21st century
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