Facebook Not Statebook: Defining SNS Diplomacy with Four Modes of Online Diplomatic Participation

Authors

  • Q. Elyse Huang The University of Texas at Austin

Keywords:

SNS diplomacy, public diplomacy, digital diplomacy, online political participation, social media

Abstract

Researchers have yet to bring definitional clarity to public diplomacy in the digital context. It is unclear whether digital diplomacy, an all-encompassing concept, always happens in the public domain. For social-networking-service (SNS) assisted public diplomacy engagements, I hereby propose “SNS diplomacy” as a new conceptual container. In SNS diplomacy, public participation is an essential component, which I conceptualize as online diplomatic participation. This article summarizes four modes of participation: expression, interaction, membership, and campaign, a framework built on online political participation research. The concept focuses on the flow of dialogue and action between diplomatic and individual actors, to which social platforms offer indispensable support. Voters may participate in domestic politics offline, but most individual actors can influence diplomatic actors only online. I argue that individuals’ online participation is significant in the diplomatic scene and that scholars should look beyond the number of retweets and comments when evaluating such behaviors and resultant impacts.

Author Biography

Q. Elyse Huang, The University of Texas at Austin

Ph.D. student, Journalism School, the University of Texas at Austin.

Downloads

Published

2020-07-15

Issue

Section

Articles