Cross-National Proximity in Online Social Network and Protest Diffusion: An Event History Analysis of Arab Spring

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2017-01-04
Authors
Kwon, K. Hazel
Hemsley, Jeff
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This study examines the role of online social network proximity in cross-national diffusion of offline protests. Drawn upon Valente’s (1995) network diffusion model, the study operationalizes social network proximity-based protest exposure, using the international Facebook friendship share data. One year-long onsite protests during Arab Spring 2011 are examined using event history modeling. The findings offer evidence of an contemporaneous online network exposure effect on cross-national diffusion of protests. An expected lagged diffusion effect was not found, however. The paper presents an innovative approach to the scholarship of global protest diffusion and collective actions. \
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binary-time-series-cross-section analysis (BTSCS), network exposure, online social networks, protest diffusion, social movement
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10 pages
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Proceedings of the 50th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
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