scispace - formally typeset
A

Ariadne Vromen

Researcher at University of Sydney

Publications -  69
Citations -  2109

Ariadne Vromen is an academic researcher from University of Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Politics & Social media. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 65 publications receiving 1805 citations. Previous affiliations of Ariadne Vromen include University of New South Wales.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The great equalizer? Patterns of social media use and youth political engagement in three advanced democracies

TL;DR: In this paper, a model of social media and political engagement among young people was proposed and tested using data from representative samples of young people in Australia, the USA, and the UK.
Journal ArticleDOI

The networked young citizen: social media, political participation and civic engagement

TL;DR: The accusations that young people are politically apathetic and somehow failing in their duty to participate in many democratic societies worldwide have been refuted by a growing number of academic and political scientists.
Journal ArticleDOI

Young people, social media and connective action: from organisational maintenance to everyday political talk

TL;DR: This article studied how politically engaged young people integrate social media use into their existing organizations and political communications, and found important group-based differences emerging in young people's citizenship norms: between the dutiful allegiance to formal politics and a more personalised, self-actualising prefe...
Journal ArticleDOI

'People Try to Put Us Down …': Participatory Citizenship of 'Generation X'

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluate the participatory citizenship of Australian young people and show that rather than having homogeneous (or even negligible) participatory experiences, four distinct participatory typologies emerge: Activist, Communitarian, Party and Individualistic.
Journal ArticleDOI

Everyday youth participation? Contrasting views from Australian policymakers and young people

TL;DR: Youth participation, as a form of consultation within policymaking processes in Australia, has been largely critiqued for its reliance on formal participation mechanisms that are rarely inclusive o... as discussed by the authors.