Consequences of Group Style for Differential Participation

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Consequences of Group Style for Differential Participation. / Carlsen, Hjalmar Alexander Bang; Toubøl, Jonas; Ralund, Snorre.

In: Social Forces, Vol. 99, No. 3, 26.06.2020, p. 1233–1273.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Carlsen, HAB, Toubøl, J & Ralund, S 2020, 'Consequences of Group Style for Differential Participation', Social Forces, vol. 99, no. 3, pp. 1233–1273. https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soaa063

APA

Carlsen, H. A. B., Toubøl, J., & Ralund, S. (2020). Consequences of Group Style for Differential Participation. Social Forces, 99(3), 1233–1273. https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soaa063

Vancouver

Carlsen HAB, Toubøl J, Ralund S. Consequences of Group Style for Differential Participation. Social Forces. 2020 Jun 26;99(3):1233–1273. https://doi.org/10.1093/sf/soaa063

Author

Carlsen, Hjalmar Alexander Bang ; Toubøl, Jonas ; Ralund, Snorre. / Consequences of Group Style for Differential Participation. In: Social Forces. 2020 ; Vol. 99, No. 3. pp. 1233–1273.

Bibtex

@article{88358c2e8b724dce83dfa75bb9753652,
title = "Consequences of Group Style for Differential Participation",
abstract = "This article proposes a theory of how interaction in groups influences differential participation in political activism and interrogates this theory through an empirical analysis of online Facebook group interaction. We study the refugee solidarity movement in a mixed methods design employing online ethnography, survey, and “big” social media data. Instead of conceptualizing the group as a social network or social movement organization (SMO), we argue that the group{\textquoteright}s culture emerges as patterns of interaction that have implications for what kind of activities in which group members participate. Based on observations from our online ethnography, we suggest that group interaction influences differential individual participation through processes of (1) encoding different habits and (2) attuning the activist to different aspects of situations. We support our theoretical propositions with six statistical tests of the relationship between the group-level variable of contentious group style and the individual-level variable of participation in political protest. The dependent variable, political protest, and a comprehensive set of controls stem from an original survey of the Danish refugee solidarity movement with 2,283 respondents. We link the survey data with “big” social media data used to estimate the focal explanatory variable, contentious group style, generated from content analysis of online interaction in 119 Facebook groups quantified with supervised machine learning. The results show that group style has a consistently positive relationship with the individual{\textquoteright}s degree of participation independent of networks, SMO framing, and individual attributes.",
author = "Carlsen, {Hjalmar Alexander Bang} and Jonas Toub{\o}l and Snorre Ralund",
year = "2020",
month = jun,
day = "26",
doi = "10.1093/sf/soaa063",
language = "English",
volume = "99",
pages = "1233–1273",
journal = "Social Forces",
issn = "0037-7732",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Consequences of Group Style for Differential Participation

AU - Carlsen, Hjalmar Alexander Bang

AU - Toubøl, Jonas

AU - Ralund, Snorre

PY - 2020/6/26

Y1 - 2020/6/26

N2 - This article proposes a theory of how interaction in groups influences differential participation in political activism and interrogates this theory through an empirical analysis of online Facebook group interaction. We study the refugee solidarity movement in a mixed methods design employing online ethnography, survey, and “big” social media data. Instead of conceptualizing the group as a social network or social movement organization (SMO), we argue that the group’s culture emerges as patterns of interaction that have implications for what kind of activities in which group members participate. Based on observations from our online ethnography, we suggest that group interaction influences differential individual participation through processes of (1) encoding different habits and (2) attuning the activist to different aspects of situations. We support our theoretical propositions with six statistical tests of the relationship between the group-level variable of contentious group style and the individual-level variable of participation in political protest. The dependent variable, political protest, and a comprehensive set of controls stem from an original survey of the Danish refugee solidarity movement with 2,283 respondents. We link the survey data with “big” social media data used to estimate the focal explanatory variable, contentious group style, generated from content analysis of online interaction in 119 Facebook groups quantified with supervised machine learning. The results show that group style has a consistently positive relationship with the individual’s degree of participation independent of networks, SMO framing, and individual attributes.

AB - This article proposes a theory of how interaction in groups influences differential participation in political activism and interrogates this theory through an empirical analysis of online Facebook group interaction. We study the refugee solidarity movement in a mixed methods design employing online ethnography, survey, and “big” social media data. Instead of conceptualizing the group as a social network or social movement organization (SMO), we argue that the group’s culture emerges as patterns of interaction that have implications for what kind of activities in which group members participate. Based on observations from our online ethnography, we suggest that group interaction influences differential individual participation through processes of (1) encoding different habits and (2) attuning the activist to different aspects of situations. We support our theoretical propositions with six statistical tests of the relationship between the group-level variable of contentious group style and the individual-level variable of participation in political protest. The dependent variable, political protest, and a comprehensive set of controls stem from an original survey of the Danish refugee solidarity movement with 2,283 respondents. We link the survey data with “big” social media data used to estimate the focal explanatory variable, contentious group style, generated from content analysis of online interaction in 119 Facebook groups quantified with supervised machine learning. The results show that group style has a consistently positive relationship with the individual’s degree of participation independent of networks, SMO framing, and individual attributes.

U2 - 10.1093/sf/soaa063

DO - 10.1093/sf/soaa063

M3 - Journal article

VL - 99

SP - 1233

EP - 1273

JO - Social Forces

JF - Social Forces

SN - 0037-7732

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 240987195