Publication | Open Access
Making Space for Garbage Cans: How emergent groups organize social media spaces to orchestrate widescale helping in a crisis
30
Citations
55
References
2022
Year
Digital SocietyOnline Volunteering GroupUrban InformaticsUnited KingdomCommunicationSocial Media SpacesSocial SciencesSocial MediaOnline CommunityGarbage CansSpatial TheorySocial NetworksEmergent GroupsCrowd BehaviorVulnerable PeopleSocial WebUrban GeographyCommunity OrganizingSocial ComputingSociologyCollective ActionArtsSocial InformaticsUrban Space
During the Covid-19 pandemic, citizens self-organized at an unprecedented scale to support vulnerable people in neighbourhoods, towns and cities. Drawing on an in-depth study of an online volunteering group that emerged at the beginning of the pandemic and helped thousands of people in a city in the United Kingdom, we unpack how citizens co-construct social media spaces to orchestrate helping activity during a crisis. Conceptualizing a novel synthesis of classical garbage can theory and virtual space, we reveal how emergent groups use ‘spatial partitioning’ and ‘spatial mapping’ to create a multi-layered spatial architecture that distributes decision-making and invites impromptu choice occasions: spontaneous matchmaking, proximal chance connects and speculative attraction. Our insights extend the study of emergent organizing and decision-making in crises. Furthermore, we advance a new line of theorizing which exploits garbage can theory, beyond its existing application in classical decision sciences, to posit a spatial view of organizing that paves the way for its novel applications in organization studies.
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