Activist Reflexivity and Mediated Violence: Putting the Policing of Nuit Debout in Context

Authors: FEIGENBAUM, A. and MCCURDY, P.

Journal: International Journal of Communication

Volume: 12

Pages: 1887-1907

eISSN: 1932-8036

Abstract:

To better understand the historical trajectory of the policing of Nuit Debout, in this article we argue that the reflexive relationship between police and protest tactics is heavily mediated by the presence of the press and by the emergence of digital technologies. Our analysis focuses on three sets of reflexive activist practice: (a) challenging media representations—the adaptations and innovations that respond to dominant media framing of police–protester relations; (b) “sousveillance” and police monitoring—the recording and monitoring of police violence and the public education around the police’s use of force; (c) civic forensics and data aggregation—the gathering, analyzing, and collectivizing of citizen-generated data. Although not intended as a taxonomy, these groups of practices are offered as conceptual lenses for critically examining how activists’ tactical repertoires for protesting police adapt and evolve, building on each other to challenge the representational, legal, and material dimensions of state power as it manifests in police–protester relations.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/30799/

Source: Scopus

Activist Reflexivity and Mediated Violence: Putting the Policing of Nuit Debout in Context

Authors: Feigenbaum, A. and McCurdy, P.

Journal: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION

Volume: 12

Pages: 1887-1907

ISSN: 1932-8036

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/30799/

Source: Web of Science (Lite)

Activist Reflexivity and Mediated Violence: Putting the Policing of Nuit Debout in Context

Authors: Feigenbaum, A. and McCurdy, P.

Journal: International Journal of Communication

Volume: 12

ISSN: 1932-8036

Abstract:

To better understand the historical trajectory of the policing of Nuit Debout, in this article we argue that the reflexive relationship between police and protest tactics is heavily mediated by the presence of the press and by the emergence of digital technologies. Our analysis focuses on three sets of reflexive activist practice: (a) challenging media representations—the adaptations and innovations that respond to dominant media framing of police–protester relations; (b) “sousveillance” and police monitoring—the recording and monitoring of police violence and the public education around the police’s use of force; (c) civic forensics and data aggregation—the gathering, analyzing, and collectivizing of citizen-generated data. Although not intended as a taxonomy, these groups of practices are offered as conceptual lenses for critically examining how activists’ tactical repertoires for protesting police adapt and evolve, building on each other to challenge the representational, legal, and material dimensions of state power as it manifests in police–protester relations.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/30799/

Source: Manual

Activist Reflexivity and Mediated Violence: Putting the Policing of Nuit Debout in Context

Authors: Feigenbaum, A. and McCurdy, P.

Journal: International Journal of Communication

Volume: 12

Pages: 1887-1907

ISSN: 1932-8036

Abstract:

To better understand the historical trajectory of the policing of Nuit Debout, in this article we argue that the reflexive relationship between police and protest tactics is heavily mediated by the presence of the press and by the emergence of digital technologies. Our analysis focuses on three sets of reflexive activist practice: (a) challenging media representations—the adaptations and innovations that respond to dominant media framing of police–protester relations; (b) “sousveillance” and police monitoring—the recording and monitoring of police violence and the public education around the police’s use of force; (c) civic forensics and data aggregation—the gathering, analyzing, and collectivizing of citizen-generated data. Although not intended as a taxonomy, these groups of practices are offered as conceptual lenses for critically examining how activists’ tactical repertoires for protesting police adapt and evolve, building on each other to challenge the representational, legal, and material dimensions of state power as it manifests in police–protester relations.

https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/30799/

http://ijoc.org/index.php/ijoc/index

Source: BURO EPrints