Publication | Open Access
<scp>T</scp>witter: An Underutilized Potential during Sudden Crises?
44
Citations
7
References
2013
Year
Social Medium MonitoringCrisis ManagementPublic OpinionCommunicationDisaster CoverageSocial SciencesSocial MediaSocial Medium NewsPolitical CommunicationCitizen TweetsContent AnalysisCrisis NegotiationSudden CrisesUse T WitterPopular CommunicationGlobal MediaGovernment CommunicationT WitterMedia PoliciesCrisis CommunicationMass CommunicationArtsMedia LawsSocial Medium DataPolitical ScienceEmergency Communication
The widespread use of T witter by citizens during sudden crises has convinced communications experts that governments should also actively use T witter during crises. However, this position seems insufficiently empirically validated. In this article, we want to provide empirical building blocks for an informed approach to the use of T witter by the government. To this end, we analyze the tweets posted by citizens and governments about the large‐scale fire in M oerdijk (2011), the N etherlands. The results show that by far, most tweets do not contain any new and relevant information for governments and that the tweets posted by governments got buried under an avalanche of citizen tweets. We may conclude that the M oerdijk case does not give rise to advocate a (more) active role of governments on T witter during sudden crises.
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