We compare activist-based internet data with four other media sources—Lexis Nexis Academic Universe, The Seattle Times, Global Newsbank, and The New York Times—on their coverage of the local, national, and international protests that accompanied the World Trade Organization's (WTO) Third Ministerial Conference in Seattle, Washington in late 1999. Using the Media Sensitivity-Protest Intensity Model of event reporting, we find that activist-based web sites report a greater number of transnational protest events at the local, national, and international level. We also find that activist-based websites are less positively influenced by the intensity properties of protest events. In the age of globalization, research on transnational movements should therefore combine conventional media sources and activist-based web sources.
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1 October 2003
Research Article|
February 21 2006
To The Internet, From The Internet: Comparative Media Coverage Of Transnational Protests
Paul Almeida;
Paul Almeida
1
Texas A & M University, College Station, TX
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Mark Lichbach
Mark Lichbach
2
University of Maryland, College Park, MD
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Mobilization: An International Quarterly (2003) 8 (3): 249–272.
Citation
Paul Almeida, Mark Lichbach; To The Internet, From The Internet: Comparative Media Coverage Of Transnational Protests. Mobilization: An International Quarterly 1 October 2003; 8 (3): 249–272. doi: https://doi.org/10.17813/maiq.8.3.9044l650652801xl
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