| Title | Many Clicks but Little Sticks |
|---|---|
| Subtitle | Social Media Activism in Indonesia |
| Contributor | Merlyna Lim(author) |
| Copyright | Merlyna Lim |
| Publisher | meson press |
| Published on | 2015-07-01 |
| Page range | pp. 127–154 |
| Language | English (Original) |
Merlyna Lim isascholar studying ICT (Information and Communication Studies), particularly on the socio-political shaping of new media in nonWestern contexts. She has been appointed a Canada Research Chair in Digital Media and Global Network Society in the School of Journalism and Communication Carleton University in 2014. Formerly she wasaVisiting Research Scholar at Princeton University’s Center for Information Technology Policy and aDistinguished Scholar of Technology and Public Engagement of the School of Social Transformation Justice and Social Inquiry Program and the Consortium for Science, Policy and Outcomes at Arizona State University. She previously held a Networked Public Research Associate position at the Annenberg Center for Communication at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles. She got her PhD, with distinction (cum laude), from University of Twente in Enschede, Netherlands, withadissertation entitled “@rchipelago Online: The Internet and Political Activism in Indonesia.”
Nishant Shah is Professor of Culture and Aesthetics of New Media at the Leuphana University Lüneburg, Research Associate at Common Media Lab, Affiliate at Digital Cultures Research Lab, and International Tandempartner at Hybrid Publishing Lab. He is the co-founder and former-Director-Research at the Centre for Internet and Society, India. In his varied roles, he has been committed to producing infrastructure, frameworks and collaborations in the global south to understand and analyse the ways in which emergence and growth of digital technologies have shaped the contemporary social, political and cultural milieu. His Ph.D. thesis titled “The Technosocial Subject: Cities, Cyborgs and Cyberspace” builds a framework to examine the technosocial identities that are produced at the intersection of law, digital technologies and everyday cultural practices in emerging information societies like India. Nishant was an Asia Research fellow looking at the cost and infrastructure of building IT Cities like Shanghai. He is the author of a recent thought-piece titled “Whose Change is it Anyway? – Towards a future of digital technologies and citizen action in emerging information societies” that seeks to revisit the debates around digital activism and change in the global context. His current interests are in critically intervening in debates around Digital Humanities and conditions of change mediated by technologies.