Minimal Effects, Maximum Panic: Social Media and Democracy in Latin America

In face of public discourses about the negative effects that social media might have on democracy in Latin America, this article provides a qualitative assessment of existing scholarship about the uses, actors, and effects of platforms for democratic life. Our findings suggest that, first, campaigni...

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Main Authors: Eugenia Mitchelstein, Mora Matassi, Pablo J. Boczkowski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-12-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305120984452
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spelling doaj-4d0934004d3c42e3988fdcb2f9856c2a2020-12-30T01:33:55ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512020-12-01610.1177/2056305120984452Minimal Effects, Maximum Panic: Social Media and Democracy in Latin AmericaEugenia Mitchelstein0Mora Matassi1Pablo J. Boczkowski2Universidad de San Andrés, ArgentinaNorthwestern University, USANorthwestern University, USAIn face of public discourses about the negative effects that social media might have on democracy in Latin America, this article provides a qualitative assessment of existing scholarship about the uses, actors, and effects of platforms for democratic life. Our findings suggest that, first, campaigning, collective action, and electronic government are the main political uses of platforms. Second, politicians and office holders, social movements, news producers, and citizens are the main actors who utilize them for political purposes. Third, there are two main positive effects of these platforms for the democratic process—enabling social engagement and information diffusion—and two main negative ones—the presence of disinformation, and the spread of extremism and hate speech. A common denominator across positive and negative effects is that platforms appear to have minimal effects that amplify pre-existing patterns rather than create them de novo.https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305120984452
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eugenia Mitchelstein
Mora Matassi
Pablo J. Boczkowski
spellingShingle Eugenia Mitchelstein
Mora Matassi
Pablo J. Boczkowski
Minimal Effects, Maximum Panic: Social Media and Democracy in Latin America
Social Media + Society
author_facet Eugenia Mitchelstein
Mora Matassi
Pablo J. Boczkowski
author_sort Eugenia Mitchelstein
title Minimal Effects, Maximum Panic: Social Media and Democracy in Latin America
title_short Minimal Effects, Maximum Panic: Social Media and Democracy in Latin America
title_full Minimal Effects, Maximum Panic: Social Media and Democracy in Latin America
title_fullStr Minimal Effects, Maximum Panic: Social Media and Democracy in Latin America
title_full_unstemmed Minimal Effects, Maximum Panic: Social Media and Democracy in Latin America
title_sort minimal effects, maximum panic: social media and democracy in latin america
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Social Media + Society
issn 2056-3051
publishDate 2020-12-01
description In face of public discourses about the negative effects that social media might have on democracy in Latin America, this article provides a qualitative assessment of existing scholarship about the uses, actors, and effects of platforms for democratic life. Our findings suggest that, first, campaigning, collective action, and electronic government are the main political uses of platforms. Second, politicians and office holders, social movements, news producers, and citizens are the main actors who utilize them for political purposes. Third, there are two main positive effects of these platforms for the democratic process—enabling social engagement and information diffusion—and two main negative ones—the presence of disinformation, and the spread of extremism and hate speech. A common denominator across positive and negative effects is that platforms appear to have minimal effects that amplify pre-existing patterns rather than create them de novo.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305120984452
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