Friends get vaccinated: The power of social media groups in the COVID-19 vaccination campaign

First Monday ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shlomit Manor ◽  
Tamar Israeli

In times of crisis the power of social media is reflected in its ability to influence social behavior and act quickly without bureaucratic mechanisms. During the Israeli COVID-19 vaccination campaign, social media groups were formed to collect, verify, and disseminate information about leftover vaccine doses. Masses of people quickly joined these groups, rushed to the vaccine locations, and shared real-time information with other group members. Based on 15 semi-structured interviews with group members and admins, we identified three motives for creating groups: making information accessible, the struggle against vaccine opponents, and a desire to return to life as it was before the pandemic. Rapid group joining has been described in terms of collective behavior and contagion theory.

Author(s):  
Tina D. Purnat ◽  
Harry Wilson ◽  
Tim Nguyen ◽  
Sylvie Briand

As the COVID-19 pandemic evolves, the accompanying infodemic is being amplified through social media and has challenged effective response. The WHO Early AI-supported Response with Social Listening (EARS) is a platform that summarizes real-time information about how people are talking about COVID-19 in public spaces online in 20 pilot countries and in four languages. The aim of the platform is to better integrate social listening with other data sources and analyses that can inform infodemic response.


2014 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 1-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pauline Hope Cheong

Religious believers have historically adapted Scripture into brief texts for wider dissemination through relatively inexpensive publications. The emergence of Twitter and other microblogging tools today afford clerics a platform for real time information sharing with its interface for short written texts, which includes providing links to graphics and sound recordings that can be forwarded and responded to by others. This paper discusses emergent practices in tweet authorship which embed and are inspired by sacred Scripture, in order to deepen understanding of the changing nature of sacred texts and of the constitution of religious authority as pastors engage microblogging and social media networks. Drawing upon a Twitter feed by a prominent Christian megachurch leader with global influence, this paper identifies multiple ways in which tweets have been encoded to quote, remix and interpret Scripture, and to serve as choice aphorisms that reflect or are inspired by Scripture. Implications for the changing nature of sacred digital texts and the reconstruction of religious authority are also discussed.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document