Pipelines, petitions, and protests in the Internet Age: Exploring the human geographies of online petitions challenging proposed transcontinental Alberta Oil Sands pipelines

Since the mid-2000s, millions of spatiotemporally disparate and demographically heterogeneous North Americans have signed online petitions challenging proposed transcontinental Alberta oil sands export pipelines. This phenomenon typifies bottom-up, self-organized, and ostensibly extemporaneous cyber...

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Main Authors: McNeill, J, Thornton, T
Format: Journal article
Published: Taylor and Francis 2017
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author McNeill, J
Thornton, T
author_facet McNeill, J
Thornton, T
author_sort McNeill, J
collection OXFORD
description Since the mid-2000s, millions of spatiotemporally disparate and demographically heterogeneous North Americans have signed online petitions challenging proposed transcontinental Alberta oil sands export pipelines. This phenomenon typifies bottom-up, self-organized, and ostensibly extemporaneous cyberactivism. These dynamics contradict traditional theoretical assumptions about rational choice and social pressures in collective action, birthing queries regarding why individuals participate. Human geographies comprising three online petitions challenging separate proposed pipelines are accordingly examined by comparing signatories' stated sociopolitical motivations for signing with their corresponding geospatial distributions. This innovative fusion of qualitative and quantitative research methods was designed to explore hetero versus homogeneity in signatories' sociopolitical commitments and locations. The results empirically corroborate Bennett and Segerberg's (2012) thesis that cyberactivism is governed by a unique logic of connective action wherein participation thresholds are low, collective identities and social incentives are weak, relationships are defined socially rather than spatially, and contentious politics are highly personalized. Four integrated findings with implications for policymaking and future research are offered for consideration.
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spelling oxford-uuid:e6eeb23b-e5a5-4dde-afe6-dfb36855767c2022-03-27T10:34:37ZPipelines, petitions, and protests in the Internet Age: Exploring the human geographies of online petitions challenging proposed transcontinental Alberta Oil Sands pipelinesJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:e6eeb23b-e5a5-4dde-afe6-dfb36855767cSymplectic Elements at OxfordTaylor and Francis2017McNeill, JThornton, TSince the mid-2000s, millions of spatiotemporally disparate and demographically heterogeneous North Americans have signed online petitions challenging proposed transcontinental Alberta oil sands export pipelines. This phenomenon typifies bottom-up, self-organized, and ostensibly extemporaneous cyberactivism. These dynamics contradict traditional theoretical assumptions about rational choice and social pressures in collective action, birthing queries regarding why individuals participate. Human geographies comprising three online petitions challenging separate proposed pipelines are accordingly examined by comparing signatories' stated sociopolitical motivations for signing with their corresponding geospatial distributions. This innovative fusion of qualitative and quantitative research methods was designed to explore hetero versus homogeneity in signatories' sociopolitical commitments and locations. The results empirically corroborate Bennett and Segerberg's (2012) thesis that cyberactivism is governed by a unique logic of connective action wherein participation thresholds are low, collective identities and social incentives are weak, relationships are defined socially rather than spatially, and contentious politics are highly personalized. Four integrated findings with implications for policymaking and future research are offered for consideration.
spellingShingle McNeill, J
Thornton, T
Pipelines, petitions, and protests in the Internet Age: Exploring the human geographies of online petitions challenging proposed transcontinental Alberta Oil Sands pipelines
title Pipelines, petitions, and protests in the Internet Age: Exploring the human geographies of online petitions challenging proposed transcontinental Alberta Oil Sands pipelines
title_full Pipelines, petitions, and protests in the Internet Age: Exploring the human geographies of online petitions challenging proposed transcontinental Alberta Oil Sands pipelines
title_fullStr Pipelines, petitions, and protests in the Internet Age: Exploring the human geographies of online petitions challenging proposed transcontinental Alberta Oil Sands pipelines
title_full_unstemmed Pipelines, petitions, and protests in the Internet Age: Exploring the human geographies of online petitions challenging proposed transcontinental Alberta Oil Sands pipelines
title_short Pipelines, petitions, and protests in the Internet Age: Exploring the human geographies of online petitions challenging proposed transcontinental Alberta Oil Sands pipelines
title_sort pipelines petitions and protests in the internet age exploring the human geographies of online petitions challenging proposed transcontinental alberta oil sands pipelines
work_keys_str_mv AT mcneillj pipelinespetitionsandprotestsintheinternetageexploringthehumangeographiesofonlinepetitionschallengingproposedtranscontinentalalbertaoilsandspipelines
AT thorntont pipelinespetitionsandprotestsintheinternetageexploringthehumangeographiesofonlinepetitionschallengingproposedtranscontinentalalbertaoilsandspipelines