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Digital Politics in Canada: Parties, Memes, and the Courts, with Dr. Tamara Small
Digital Politics in Canada: Parties, Memes, and the Courts, with Dr. Tamara Small
ratings:
Length:
47 minutes
Released:
Feb 21, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Dr. Tamara A. Small, Associate Professor in Political Science at the University of Guelph, discusses her research on social media and politics in Canada. We start out with her latest edited volume Digital Politics in Canada: Promises and Realities (2020, University of Toronto Press). We then dive into Dr. Small's research on Canadian party leaders' use of Twitter, citizens' sharing of memes about Stephen Harper and Justin Trudeau, and how Canadian courts use social media. We also cover how journalists live-tweet about court cases, and the Canadian courts' struggle to adapt during Covid-19. Here's the full list of studies discused in the episode: Digital Politics in Canada: Promises and Realities (2020)What the Hashtag? A Content Analysis of Canadian Politics on Twitter (2011)Online Negativity in Canada: Do Canadian Party Leaders Attack on Twitter? (2018)Trolling Stephen Harper: Internet Memes as Online Activism (2019)“Justin Trudeau – I Don’t Know Her”: An Analysis of Leadership Memes of Justin Trudeau (2020)Tweet Justice: The Canadian Court’s Use of Social Media (2020)Play-by-Play Justice: Tweeting Criminal Trials in the Digital Age (2020)Trial by Zoom? The Response to COVID-19 by Canada's Courts (2020)
Released:
Feb 21, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Social Media and Political Youth Organizations in Denmark, with Emilie Demant: Emilie Demant, social media coordinator for Venstres Ungdom, shares her insights into how a Danish political youth organization is using social media to engage young voters with politics. We discuss how Facebook, Snapchat, Instagram, and Twitter are each used differently to communicate politics with young Danes, as well as what types of user-generated content Emilie receives when managing these social media accounts. Emilie highlights the visual element of social media by stressing that memes, GIFs, and videos drive the most engagement on social media, and here digital marketing and graphic design play a key role. We also discuss the differences between a youth political organization and the parent political party, Venstre, and what that means for their social media use. Although exhibiting different rules of political communication on social media (especially on Snapchat), interestingly, both Venstre and Ve by Social Media and Politics