Peer reviewed scholarly: historical context example
J.M. Jasper "Emotions and social movements: Twenty years of theory of and research (reference 27)
- I think this source is an example of a peer reviewed scholarly source containing historical context because it is found within a journal and contains an abstract. Furthermore, the title reveals that the paper discusses at least two decades of social movement history.
Peer reviewed scholarly on specific protest or similar protest example
Wall, M.A. "Social movements and email: Expressions of online identity in the globalization protests." (reference 54)
- This source is an example of a peer reviewed scholarly source because it is found within an established journal. This source was used in Trere's paper to highlight the protests at the World Trade Organization.
Peer reviewed scholarly on the community or the identity example
Garcia, R. J. and Trere, Emiliano. "The #YoSoy132 movement and the struggle for media democratization in Mexico" (reference 20)
- This article, co-written by Trere, is peer reviewed and its title implies that it discusses the same identity/community.
Theoretical peer reviewed scholarly example
Ayers, M.D. "Comparing collective identity in online and offline feminist activists." (reference 3)
- I believe Trere used this source as a peer reviewed theoretical example because it presents an instance of protest for a very specific group.
Serious national journal example
Kavada, A."Between individuality and collectiveness; Email lists and face-to-face contact in the global justice movement."(reference 31)
- This source covers a topic of serious nature and is from the reputable journal, the Journal of Media and Communciation Research.
Popular primary source example
Starbird, K and Palen, L. "(How) will the revolution be retweeted? Information diffusion and the 2011 Egyptian uprising." (reference 46).
- This source is not from a journal, making it a popular source. It is, however, apart of an online grouping of articles.
No comments:
Post a Comment