Interdisciplinary Journal of Humanities, Media, and Political Science (IJHMPS)
DOI https://www.doi.org/10.56830/IJHMPS12202504
Authors
Abstract
Digital activism, which is defined as political engagement via internet-connected technologies and social media platforms, has radically changed the ways in which movements attract supporters and spread their political messages.
This paper takes an exhaustive look at digital activism at the confluence of social media platforms like Facebook, YouTube, Instagram, and Twitter with political movement-building; it assesses both its transformative potential and major limitations.
Social media affordances such as reduced cost of participation, signaling identity, and algorithmic curation act as important catalysts for movement success.
However, there are very serious challenges to the integrity of digital activism that this paper will note: increasing censorship, deepfakes, coordinated inauthentic behavior attacks against us all from within the system itself expose ecosystem vulnerabilities and make it harder than ever before to tell real people apart from manipulated ones.
The analysis focuses on that even though the internet is a giant leap forward for civic participation, it does not take away from the fact that closing digital divides in access and usage equity as well as ensuring government accountability are still very much part of the equation.
Transformative potential does not just come with technological innovation; rather it comes with paired democratic governance frameworks, digital literacy initiatives, and human rights protections online as well as offline.
Keywords: Digital Activism, Social Media, Political Movement
