Description
On December 16th, 2012, Jyoti Singh, a female psychotherapy student from New Delhi was raped by six men in a moving bus while making her way home with a male friend. After 13 days spent fighting for her life, Jyoti Singh passed away. Abiding by Indian laws, Joyti's actual name was never mentioned by the media and pseudonyms like 'Nirbhaya' (Hindi for fearless) were most commonly used. The brutal attack instantly triggered domestic and global criticism and widespread protests across India over the high levels of violence against Indian women and children, making it one of the biggest gender movements that the country has witnessed. The Nirbhaya case thus became a turning point in the politics of gender justice in India.
The Nationwide protests that followed the case also witnessed one of the first and most extensive uses of digital technologies for activism in India having far reaching changes in how gender activism is conducted. Keeping the Nibhaya case at its core, this book explores and attempts to understand experiences and social constructs and investigate the use of digital technologies and social media by civil society actors, activists and organisations specifically for gender activism in India.
About the Author
Dr Adrija Dey is a British Academy Post-Doctoral Research Fellow at the SOAS South Asia Institute, University of London, UK.
Reviews
Dey investigates how civil society actors, activists, and organizations in India use information and communication technology and social media for gender activism. She begins with the cyberconflict framework, but because it was not build with a gender focus, she had to broadened its theoretical foundation in order to study the relation between social movements, gender, and information and communication technology. The protests after the 16 December 2012 Delhi Nirbhaya rape case serve as her case study. -- Annotation (c)2018 * (protoview.com) *
Book Information
ISBN 9781787545304
Author Adrija Dey
Format Hardback
Page Count 248
Imprint Emerald Publishing Limited
Publisher Emerald Publishing Limited
Weight(grams) 481g