2018
DOI: 10.1017/s0008423918000513
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Juste part, boycott et loi spéciale. Le cadrage gouvernemental d'un printemps de crise sociale

Abstract: RésuméCet article étudie la stratégie de communication gouvernementale lors du mouvement de grève étudiante de 2012 au Québec. Six ans après la fin du conflit, et malgré la production d'un volume important d'analyses et de réflexions sur cette crise sociale, aucune étude empirique n'a recensé systématiquement le contenu de la stratégie communicationnelle du gouvernement. Par le biais d'une analyse de contenu quantitative des interventions publiques des membres de l'exécutif, cette étude relève les cadres argum… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 13 publications
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“…According to Raynauld et al, Quebec's Maple Spring "can be viewed as one of the first grassroots-intensive political movements in Canada where social media played an instrumental role" (2016: 23). After several months of social conflict, the outgoing Liberal government, having failed to maintain its framing of the crisis (Giasson and Dubois, 2018), launched the electoral campaign on August 1st for a September 4th ballot. 1 In preparation for the election, the LPQ, which had been virtually absent from social media prior to 2008, built its Web 2.0 presence throughout the course of its last mandate, asking members of its parliamentary caucus, its ministers and its party officials to create Facebook and Twitter accounts in order to engage directly with Internet users.…”
Section: Why Study #Qc2012?mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…According to Raynauld et al, Quebec's Maple Spring "can be viewed as one of the first grassroots-intensive political movements in Canada where social media played an instrumental role" (2016: 23). After several months of social conflict, the outgoing Liberal government, having failed to maintain its framing of the crisis (Giasson and Dubois, 2018), launched the electoral campaign on August 1st for a September 4th ballot. 1 In preparation for the election, the LPQ, which had been virtually absent from social media prior to 2008, built its Web 2.0 presence throughout the course of its last mandate, asking members of its parliamentary caucus, its ministers and its party officials to create Facebook and Twitter accounts in order to engage directly with Internet users.…”
Section: Why Study #Qc2012?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to Raynauld et al, Quebec's Maple Spring “can be viewed as one of the first grassroots-intensive political movements in Canada where social media played an instrumental role” (2016: 23). After several months of social conflict, the outgoing Liberal government, having failed to maintain its framing of the crisis (Giasson and Dubois, 2018), launched the electoral campaign on August 1st for a September 4th ballot 1…”
Section: Why Study #Qc2012?mentioning
confidence: 99%