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ID161652
Title ProperMaster institution of world society? digital communications networks and the changing dynamics of transnational contention
LanguageENG
AuthorTobias Lemke ;  Lemke, Tobias
Summary / Abstract (Note)In English School theory, the putative change from an international society of states to a world society of individuals is usually associated with the diffusion of a benign form of cosmopolitanism and the normative agenda of solidarism. Consequently, the notion that world society might enable alternative expressions of transnational politics, independent from international society, remains underdeveloped. Drawing on the literature of contentious politics and social movements, this article challenges orthodox accounts and suggests that the global proliferation of digitally mediated linkages between individuals and nonstate actors constitutes a fundamental challenge to traditional dynamics of interstate communication in the form of the diplomatic system. This provides an opportunity to reconceptualize world society as an alternative site of politics distinct from mainstream international society and generative of its own logic of communication, mobilization, and action. The 2011 events in Egypt and the ongoing digital presence of the so-called Islamic State are used to demonstrate how massive increases in global interaction capacity are transforming the pathways for political contention and collective mobilization worldwide.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Relations Vol. 32, No.3; Sep 2018: p.296-320
Journal SourceInternational Relations Vol: 32 No 3
Key WordsTechnology ;  Diplomacy ;  Egypt ;  English School ;  Transnational Communication ;  Contentious Politics ;  Social Media ;  ISIL


 
 
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