In 2018, thanks to the use of social media, the Fridays For Future (FFF) movement brought global attention to climate change. However, in the post-Covid era, the rhetoric of return to normality seems to have marginalized those issues from media debate. Looking at the emergence of FFF, the paper applies topic detection to analyze 19,112 tweets on climate change. The emerging contents of social representations are examined in relation to socio-cultural (power distance; individualism; uncertainty avoidance; long-term orientation) and structural (level of pollution) factors associated with the country of origin of the tweets. The primary topic among the ones identified focuses on calls to action, particularly related to the FFF movement. When this topic is absent, others address efforts to mitigate global warming or strategies for adapting to climate change impacts. The main results indicate that tweets from the most polluted countries and those from countries high in short-term orientation, are more centered on topics concerning a posteriori response to climate change, also denying it as a defense mechanism. This could prevent the imagination of alternative futures and the projection of concrete means of countering climate change. The study suggests the importance of transcending the on-line and off-line distinction, not only for mobilization but also to form an arena for debate toward social change.

Tweeting about a revolution? A cross-national analysis of tweets on climate change during the rise of "Fridays for Future" / Rizzoli, Valentina; Gabriel Salvador Casara, Bruno; Sarrica, Mauro. - In: SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN (ONLINE). - ISSN 2569-653X. - (2024). [10.23668/psycharchives.15014]

Tweeting about a revolution? A cross-national analysis of tweets on climate change during the rise of "Fridays for Future"

Valentina Rizzoli
;
Mauro Sarrica
2024

Abstract

In 2018, thanks to the use of social media, the Fridays For Future (FFF) movement brought global attention to climate change. However, in the post-Covid era, the rhetoric of return to normality seems to have marginalized those issues from media debate. Looking at the emergence of FFF, the paper applies topic detection to analyze 19,112 tweets on climate change. The emerging contents of social representations are examined in relation to socio-cultural (power distance; individualism; uncertainty avoidance; long-term orientation) and structural (level of pollution) factors associated with the country of origin of the tweets. The primary topic among the ones identified focuses on calls to action, particularly related to the FFF movement. When this topic is absent, others address efforts to mitigate global warming or strategies for adapting to climate change impacts. The main results indicate that tweets from the most polluted countries and those from countries high in short-term orientation, are more centered on topics concerning a posteriori response to climate change, also denying it as a defense mechanism. This could prevent the imagination of alternative futures and the projection of concrete means of countering climate change. The study suggests the importance of transcending the on-line and off-line distinction, not only for mobilization but also to form an arena for debate toward social change.
2024
climate change; social representations; social anchoring; Fridays For Future; social media
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Tweeting about a revolution? A cross-national analysis of tweets on climate change during the rise of "Fridays for Future" / Rizzoli, Valentina; Gabriel Salvador Casara, Bruno; Sarrica, Mauro. - In: SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN (ONLINE). - ISSN 2569-653X. - (2024). [10.23668/psycharchives.15014]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1717645
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