2007
DOI: 10.1111/j.1083-6101.2007.00398.x
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Public Discourse, Community Concerns, and Civic Engagement: Exploring Black Social Networking Traditions on BlackPlanet.com

Abstract: This study explores community life on a black social network site, BlackPlanet, to see whether and how participants engage in public discussions; if these discussions center on issues considered to be critical to the black community; and if so, the extent to which participants' online networks are used to foster some level of civic engagement. Participation analysis, content analysis, and a thematic analysis were used to analyze public discussions on the site's community forums. The findings show that particip… Show more

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Cited by 88 publications
(76 citation statements)
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“…While attempts of solutions could be identified, they did not result in concrete offline actions. Indeed, these findings confirm other research (Byrne, 2007). As a result, one could ask, on the one hand, if collective action in a traditional sense is necessary, considering the strong potential of a dialogue for change.…”
Section: The Case Study In the Light Of Theory: Discussion Of Thesupporting
confidence: 85%
“…While attempts of solutions could be identified, they did not result in concrete offline actions. Indeed, these findings confirm other research (Byrne, 2007). As a result, one could ask, on the one hand, if collective action in a traditional sense is necessary, considering the strong potential of a dialogue for change.…”
Section: The Case Study In the Light Of Theory: Discussion Of Thesupporting
confidence: 85%
“…We selected a social media setting in studies 1-3 based on the considerable relevance of, and scholarly and managerial interest in, the 'engagement' concept in interactive Web 2.0, including social media, settings (Hoffman and Novak 2012;Briggs 2010;Byrne 2008;HennigThurau et al 2010). Kaplan and Haenlein (2010: p. 61) define 'social media' as "a group of Internet-based applications that build on the ideological and technological foundations of Web 2.0, and which allow the creation/exchange of user-generated content," including Facebook.com and Twitter.com (Boyd and Ellison 2008).…”
Section: Study 2: Cbe Measurement Assessment and Scale Dimensionalitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Grasmuck et al (2009) found a high level of explicit cultural narratives in the online behavior of their study cohort with reports of Latino, Black and Asian students more openly advertising their cultural allegiances than their white counterparts. Similarly Correa and Jeong (2011) reported students belonging to minority groups in the US Colleges they studied were more likely to engage in the creation of online content, while Byrne (2007) has suggested that participation in culturally motivated online forums has a positive effect on the racial identities of its participants. Unlike the studies reported in the US, the respondents from this study displayed a reluctance to engage in explicit expressions of Cultural identity in both their online identity construction and interaction.…”
Section: Cultural Identitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some of the implicit behavior and propensity to display culture as a by-product of self expression is counter intuitive to the findings in the literature that suggest migrants find benefits in using online networks (Byrne, 2007), that minorities are more likely to engage in explicit ethno-racially motivated expression (Grasmuck et al, 2009) and are more likely to create online content (Correa &Jeong, 2011, pp. 638-659).…”
Section: Migrationmentioning
confidence: 99%