http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=104302141&sc=fb&cc=
fp

NPR.org, May 19, 2009 *  Last week, The Globe and Mail ran an article on
the history of "slacktivism" (the G&M piece seems to have grown out of
an interview I did with CBC's Spark a few weeks ago on the same
subject). "Slacktivism" is an apt term to describe feel-good online
activism that has zero political or social impact. It gives those who
participate in "slacktivist" campaigns an illusion of having a
meaningful impact on the world without demanding anything more than
joining a Facebook group. Remember that online petition that you signed
and forwarded to your entire contacts list? That was probably an act of
slacktivism...

"Slacktivism" is the ideal type of activism for a lazy generation: why
bother with sit-ins and the risk of arrest, police brutality, or torture
if one can be as loud campaigning in the virtual space? Given the
media's fixation on all things digital - from blogging to social
networking to Twitter - every click of your mouse is almost guaranteed
to receive immediate media attention, as long as it's geared towards the
noble causes. That media attention doesn't always translate into
campaign effectiveness is only of secondary importance.

The adherents of "slacktivism" usually point a well-known narrative to
justify what they are doing: while it's true that the dramatic fall in
transaction costs of organizing activist campaigns has simply opened up
the field to many more participants and issues, there has been no drop
in the actual quality and effectiveness of these campaigns. It's easy to
dismiss most criticism of "slacktivism" as simply unproductive: after
all, having thousands of people - most of them previously not involved
in any activist campaigns at all - suddenly start practicing the kind of
click-based "nano-activism" available via Facebook and Twitter could be
extremely useful, if only for specific campaigns that would, indeed,
benefit from increased public attention.

Perhaps, it's high time to challenge this narrative and ask a very
difficult question: are the publicity gains gained through this greater
reliance on new media worth the organizational losses that traditional
activists entities are likely to suffer, as ordinary people would begin
to turn away from conventional (and proven) forms of activism
(demonstrations, sit-ins, confrontation with police, strategic
litigation, etc) and embrace more "slacktivist" forms, which may be more
secure but whose effectiveness is still largely unproven?

Let's not get into trying to find answers to purely speculative
questions like whether the utility of the very public work of 1000
"slacktivists" equals that of the very quiet and often unattributed work
of one traditional activist. The real issue here is whether the mere
availability of the "slacktivist" option is likely to push those who in
the past might have confronted the regime in person with demonstrations,
leaflets, and labor organizing to embrace the Facebook option and join a
gazillion online issue groups instead. If this is the case, then the
much-touted tools of digital liberation are only driving us further away
from the goal of democratization and building global civil society.

Of course, the ideal case here is when one's participation in digital
activism doesn't subtract from - and instead enhances - one's eagerness
to participate in real-life campaigns. However, it's also quite possible
that a significant portion of the activist population would be morally
content with the "slacktivist" option alone, preferring not to get too
close to more dangerous activities that are likely to get them in
trouble with authorities. So should we be more careful when discussing
the success of most digital activism campaigns, since they may also have
unanticipated adverse effects on more effective forms of enacting
political and social change? (Of course, the relative effectiveness of
one type of activism over another is a matter of great contention too.)

I don't really have a good answer here and am increasingly of the
opinion that the only way to conclusively answer this question is a
scientific one: we simply need to start constructing gigantic surveys,
otherwise these insights will forever stay in the land of the anecdotal.
I also think that it might be useful to search for traces of
"slacktivism" in other fields. For example, is the growing public
fascination with "ethical consumerism" likely to erode other more
effective (and more political) forms of protest? Given that some
advocates of "ethical consumerism" still cling to the notion that
"shopping is more important that voting," this may as well be the case.
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