From Online Disagreement to Offline Action: How Diverse Motivations for Using Social Media Can Increase Political Information Sharing and Catalyze Offline Political Participation

Amid growing concerns over the contentious tenor of online political discourse, scholars have begun to recognize that the social contexts and affordances provided by social media may present indirect pathways from online political discussion to offline political participation. Less work has addresse...

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Main Authors: Daniel S. Lane, Dam Hee Kim, Slgi S. Lee, Brian E. Weeks, Nojin Kwak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2017-07-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305117716274
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spelling doaj-b9dad88869fc46c8baf72394c9f981682020-11-25T03:17:50ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512017-07-01310.1177/2056305117716274From Online Disagreement to Offline Action: How Diverse Motivations for Using Social Media Can Increase Political Information Sharing and Catalyze Offline Political ParticipationDaniel S. LaneDam Hee KimSlgi S. LeeBrian E. WeeksNojin KwakAmid growing concerns over the contentious tenor of online political discourse, scholars have begun to recognize that the social contexts and affordances provided by social media may present indirect pathways from online political discussion to offline political participation. Less work has addressed how users’ motivations for using social media might influence such dynamics. In this study, we use two-wave panel survey data collected in the United States to test the possibility that online cross-cutting discussion involving political disagreement can encourage users to share political information on social media, which in turn can increase their offline political engagement. We also test how specific motivations for using social media (i.e., political engagement, relationship maintenance, and self-promotion) moderate the amount users share political information on social media when engaged in conversations involving political disagreement. Our results find that increased online cross-cutting political discussion indirectly affects offline political participation through the influence of social media political information sharing. We also observe that this indirect effect is stronger for users who are motivated to use social media for either political engagement or relationship maintenance (but not self-promotion) purposes. Our findings advance one route from online political disagreement to offline political action, which can impact both politically and nonpolitically motivated social media users.https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305117716274
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniel S. Lane
Dam Hee Kim
Slgi S. Lee
Brian E. Weeks
Nojin Kwak
spellingShingle Daniel S. Lane
Dam Hee Kim
Slgi S. Lee
Brian E. Weeks
Nojin Kwak
From Online Disagreement to Offline Action: How Diverse Motivations for Using Social Media Can Increase Political Information Sharing and Catalyze Offline Political Participation
Social Media + Society
author_facet Daniel S. Lane
Dam Hee Kim
Slgi S. Lee
Brian E. Weeks
Nojin Kwak
author_sort Daniel S. Lane
title From Online Disagreement to Offline Action: How Diverse Motivations for Using Social Media Can Increase Political Information Sharing and Catalyze Offline Political Participation
title_short From Online Disagreement to Offline Action: How Diverse Motivations for Using Social Media Can Increase Political Information Sharing and Catalyze Offline Political Participation
title_full From Online Disagreement to Offline Action: How Diverse Motivations for Using Social Media Can Increase Political Information Sharing and Catalyze Offline Political Participation
title_fullStr From Online Disagreement to Offline Action: How Diverse Motivations for Using Social Media Can Increase Political Information Sharing and Catalyze Offline Political Participation
title_full_unstemmed From Online Disagreement to Offline Action: How Diverse Motivations for Using Social Media Can Increase Political Information Sharing and Catalyze Offline Political Participation
title_sort from online disagreement to offline action: how diverse motivations for using social media can increase political information sharing and catalyze offline political participation
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Social Media + Society
issn 2056-3051
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Amid growing concerns over the contentious tenor of online political discourse, scholars have begun to recognize that the social contexts and affordances provided by social media may present indirect pathways from online political discussion to offline political participation. Less work has addressed how users’ motivations for using social media might influence such dynamics. In this study, we use two-wave panel survey data collected in the United States to test the possibility that online cross-cutting discussion involving political disagreement can encourage users to share political information on social media, which in turn can increase their offline political engagement. We also test how specific motivations for using social media (i.e., political engagement, relationship maintenance, and self-promotion) moderate the amount users share political information on social media when engaged in conversations involving political disagreement. Our results find that increased online cross-cutting political discussion indirectly affects offline political participation through the influence of social media political information sharing. We also observe that this indirect effect is stronger for users who are motivated to use social media for either political engagement or relationship maintenance (but not self-promotion) purposes. Our findings advance one route from online political disagreement to offline political action, which can impact both politically and nonpolitically motivated social media users.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305117716274
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