Skip down to main content

The Reopen Movement: Protest and Radicalisation in the Digital Age

With Clara Martiny
Date & Time:
15:30 - 16:30,
Thursday 1 May, 2025
Location:
1 St Giles

About

This presentation is based on a book set to be published in late 2025 with Cambridge University Press investigating the online “Reopen” protest movement against COVID-19 public health shutdowns in the United States. The book, Protest and Radicalisation in the Digital Age: The Reopen Movement, characterises the movement’s origin, growth, and evolution as it interacted with public policies and offline protests, using a mixed-methods approach of digital ethnography and text analyses of an original dataset spanning more than 1.8 million Facebook comments and posts from over 224 thousand online activists.

The presentation will highlight the main findings of the research, which extend existing theories of contentious politics to suggest that movements that fail to maintain their connection to offline organisations are especially prone to mutability, radicalisation, and exhaustion. The findings offer a framework for understanding social movements in the digital age, while updating the classical theory of cycles of contention.

Clara Martiny is an MSc student at the Oxford Internet Institute researching changing social practices and uses of technology by activists and protestors in the face of hostile governments and increased state surveillance. She previously worked at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue (ISD) where she researched online hate speech and disinformation and supported ISD’s US policy work. Prior to ISD, Clara worked at media watchdog Media Matters for America (MMFA). Her research has been featured in the New York Times, the BBC, and NBC News.

Attend In Person

EVENTS: IN PERSON The Reopen Movement: Protest and Radicalisation in the Digital Age
First
Last
11 tickets remaining.

Attend Online

EVENTS: ONLINE The Reopen Movement: Protest and Radicalisation in the Digital Age
First
Last

Privacy Overview
Oxford Internet Institute

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

Strictly Necessary Cookies
  • moove_gdrp_popup -  a cookie that saves your preferences for cookie settings. Without this cookie, the screen offering you cookie options will appear on every page you visit.

This cookie remains on your computer for 365 days, but you can adjust your preferences at any time by clicking on the "Cookie settings" link in the website footer.

Please note that if you visit the Oxford University website, any cookies you accept there will appear on our site here too, this being a subdomain. To control them, you must change your cookie preferences on the main University website.

Google Analytics

This website uses Google Tags and Google Analytics to collect anonymised information such as the number of visitors to the site, and the most popular pages. Keeping these cookies enabled helps the OII improve our website.

Enabling this option will allow cookies from:

  • Google Analytics - tracking visits to the ox.ac.uk and oii.ox.ac.uk domains

These cookies will remain on your website for 365 days, but you can edit your cookie preferences at any time via the "Cookie Settings" button in the website footer.