Abstract
This study examines effects of microblogging communications during emergency events based on the case of the summer 2011 riots in London. During five days in August 2011, parts of London and other major cities in England suffered from extensive public disorders, violence and even loss of human lives. We collected and analysed the tweets posted by the official accounts maintained by 28 London local government authorities. Those authorities used Twitter for a variety of purposes such as preventing rumours, providing official information, promoting legal actions against offenders and organising post-riot community engagement activities. The study shows how the immediacy and communicative power of microblogging can have a significant effect at the response and recovery stages of emergency events.
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
Keywords
References
BBC: English Riots: Social Media were ’Force for Good’ (2011), http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-14931010 (accessed June 15, 2012)
Bertot, J.C., Jaeger, P.T., Hansen, D.: The Impact of Polices on Government Social Media Usage: Issues, Challenges, and Recommendations. Government Information Quarterly 29, 30–40 (2012)
Boyd, D., Golder, S., Lotan, G.: Tweet, Tweet, Retweet: Conversational Aspects of Retweeting on Twitter. In: 43rd Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, pp. 1–10 (2010)
Bruns, A.: How Long is a Tweet? Mapping Dynamic Converstation Networks on Twitter using Gawk and Gephi. Information, Communication & Society (in press)
Cho, S.E., Park, H.W.: Government Organizations’ Innovative use of the Internet: The Case of the Twitter Activity of South Korea’s Ministry for Food, Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. Scientometrics 90, 9–23 (2012)
Crump, J.: What are the Police Doing on Twitter? Social Media, the Police and the Public. Policy & Internet 3, 1–27 (2011)
Hale, J.E.: Crisis Response Communication Challenges: Building Theory from Qualitative Data. Journal of Business Communication 42, 112–134 (2005)
Heverin, T., Zach, L.: Twitter for City Police Department Information Sharing. Proceedings of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 47, 1–7 (2010)
Heverin, T., Zach, L.: Use of Microblogging for Collective Sense-Making during Violent Crises: A Study of Three Campus Shootings. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 63, 34–47 (2012)
Honey, C., Herring, S.C.: Beyond Microblogging: Conversation and Collaboration Via Twitter. In: 42nd Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, pp. 1–10 (2009)
Horsley, J.S., Barker, R.T.: Toward a Synthesis Model for Crisis Communication in the Public Sector: An Initial Investigation. Journal of Business and Technical Communication 16, 406–440 (2002)
Jansen, B.J., Zhang, M., Sobel, K., et al.: Twitter Power: Tweets as Electronic Word of Mouth. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 60, 2169–2188 (2009)
Mashable, A.: Visual History of Twitter (2011), http://mashable.com/2011/09/30/twitter-history-infographic/
Oh, O., Kwon, K.H., Rao, H.R.: An Exploration of Social Media in Extreme Events: Rumor Theory and Twitter during the Haiti Earthquake. In: Proceedings of the International Conference on Information Systems (2010)
Osimo, D.: Web 2.0 in Government: Why and how? JRC Scientific and Technical Reports (2008)
Panagiotopoulos, P., Sams, S.: An Overview Study of Twitter in the UK Local Government, Transforming Government Workshop, Brunel University, London (2012)
Riots Panel: 5 Days in August: An Interim Report on the 2011 English Riots (2011)
Segerberg, A., Bennett, W.L.: Social Media and the Organization of Collective Action: Using Twitter to Explore the Ecologies of Two Climate Change Protests. The Communication Review 14, 197–215 (2011)
Sinnappan, S., Farrell, C., Stewart, E.: Priceless Tweets! A Study on Twitter Messages Posted during Crisis: Black Saturday. In: Proceedings of the Australasian Conference on Information Systems (2010)
Small, T.A.: What the Hashtag? A Content Analysis of Canadian Politics on Twitter. Information, Communication & Society 14, 872–895 (2011)
Takhteyev, Y., Gruzd, A., Wellman, B.: Geography of Twitter Networks. Social Networks 34, 73–81 (2012)
Tonkin, E., Pfeiffer, H.D., Tourte, G.: Twitter, Information Sharing and the London Riots? Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 38, 49–57 (2012)
Waters, R.D., Williams, J.M.: Squawking, Tweeting, Cooing, and Hooting: Analyzing the Communication Patterns of Government Agencies on Twitter. Journal of Public Affairs 11, 353–363 (2011)
Waugh, W.L., Streib, G.: Collaboration and Leadership for Effective Emergency Management. Public Administration Review 66, 131–140 (2006)
Wigand, F.D.: Twitter Takes Wing in Government: Diffusion, Roles, and Management. In: Proceedings of the 11th Annual International Digital Government Research Conference on Public Administration Online: Challenges and Opportunities, pp. 66–71 (2010)
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2012 IFIP International Federation for Information Processing
About this paper
Cite this paper
Panagiotopoulos, P., Ziaee Bigdeli, A., Sams, S. (2012). "5 Days in August" – How London Local Authorities Used Twitter during the 2011 Riots. In: Scholl, H.J., Janssen, M., Wimmer, M.A., Moe, C.E., Flak, L.S. (eds) Electronic Government. EGOV 2012. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 7443. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-33489-4_9
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-33489-4_9
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-642-33488-7
Online ISBN: 978-3-642-33489-4
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)