Participatory Privacy: How Privacy Governs Openness and Inclusion in Online Social Movements
Sanfilippo, Madelyn Rose; Strandburg, Katherine J.
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https://hdl.handle.net/2142/130978
Description
Title
Participatory Privacy: How Privacy Governs Openness and Inclusion in Online Social Movements
Author(s)
Sanfilippo, Madelyn Rose
Strandburg, Katherine J.
Contributor(s)
Sanfilippo, Madelyn Rose
Issue Date
2021
Keyword(s)
privacy, social media, governance, participation, social movements
Date of Ingest
2026-01-29T14:47:17-06:00
Abstract
Social and political movements increasingly depend on online platforms for coordination, publicity, communication, and development of knowledge resources. The March for Science, Day Without Immigrants, and Women’s March present a unique opportunity to compare participation governance in online social movements. This paper employs large
social media data sets, contextualized by organizer interviews and participant surveys, to study how commons governance of privacy shaped membership, participation and group boundaries in both satellite groups and overall movements, as well as interaction and exchange of knowledge between
groups. We also discuss participants as a unique “resource” governed in knowledge commons.
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