Virtue Ethics and a Technomoral Framework for Online Activism

Authors

  • Joe Cruz Roanoke College
  • Patrick Lee Plaisance Pennsylvania State University

Keywords:

online activism, political discourse, virtue theory, technology ethics

Abstract

This article examines online activism from an ethical perspective and proposes a virtue theory framework through which to advocate specific normative standards. Over the years, digital media have become useful tools for social movements in democratic societies, providing them with spaces to congregate, exchange ideas, and mobilize. Yet, this same activism-enhancing digital infrastructure paradoxically thrives on ethically inadequate principles that could undermine activists’ efforts. Drawing on scholarship on technomoral virtues and media participation, this article aims to develop a set of moral guidelines that help reorient online activism toward the pursuit of a mode of social change that concerns itself with the cultivation of the self through interactions with peers and is simultaneously aware of the ethical challenges entrenched in the digital realm.

Author Biographies

Joe Cruz, Roanoke College

Visiting Assistant Professor in the English and Communication Studies Department.

Patrick Lee Plaisance, Pennsylvania State University

Don W. Davis Professor in Ethics in the Donald P. Bellisario College of Communications

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Published

2021-02-20

Issue

Section

Articles