Abstract

This paper focuses on the uses of Web 2.0 platforms by residents of favelas, urban slums in Brazil, in order to expand our understanding of what Web 2.0 can and cannot do in terms of social change. To explore this problem space, I draw on a 10-month ethnography in the favelas of Vitória, Brazil to study slum residents’ Web 2.0 practices and engagements. I show how Web 2.0 afforded favela residents the ability to protest and cross social boundaries, but when that happened they faced something much stronger: social exclusion, police brutality against the blacks and poor, and limited civic engagement.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

6-10-2016

Notes/Citation Information

Published in First Monday, v. 21, no. 6.

Authors retain copyright to their work published in First Monday.

“Rethinking social change: The promises of Web 2.0 for the marginalized” by David Nemer is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

https://doi.org/10.5210/fm.v21i6.6786

Share

COinS