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Activism and the Online Mediation Opportunity Structure: Attempts to Impact Global Climate Change Policies?
Author(s) -
Uldam Julie
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
policy and internet
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.281
H-Index - 26
ISSN - 1944-2866
DOI - 10.1002/poi3.22
Subject(s) - contest , climate change , civil society , mediation , collective action , climate justice , political science , social movement , convention , commons , social media , privilege (computing) , political economy , sociology , public relations , politics , law , ecology , biology
The annual United Nations (UN) Framework Convention on Climate Change conferences provides a transnational mediation opportunity structure for activist networks to contest policies that favor market‐based models for solving the climate crisis. Online technologies, including commercial social media, have arguably increased possibilities for being involved in protests on a transnational level. However, this article shows how online modes of action privilege lobbying tactics over civil disobedience tactics, arguing that the former is often incommensurate with an anticapitalist climate approach to climate change activism. This impedes possibilities for using online media to protest at the radical end of the climate justice movement spectrum. This article explores this interrelationship between activist demands and (online) modes of action through a focus on the mobilization efforts of London‐based activists for the 17th UN climate conference in 2011 .

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