Online activism and street harassment

Critical cartographies, counter-mapping and spatial justice

Authors

  • Bianca Kate Fileborn University of Melbourne

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35295/osls.iisl/0000-0000-0000-1144

Keywords:

Street harassment, digital criminology, activism, critical cartography, crime mapping

Abstract

Social media and activist sites have provided an avenue to contest the dominant framing of street harassment as ‘trivial’ and have sought to make street harassment and its harms visible. To date, digital activism has been analysed and conceptualised in relation to its potential as a counter-public forum that enables collective action and resistance, political mobilisation, ‘speaking out’ and consciousness raising, and as a site of informal or innovative justice. I aim to build on this literature by examining the potential for the activist sites Hollaback!, @catcallsofnyc and @dearcatcallers to function as a form of ‘counter-mapping’, contributing towards broader social justice efforts to disrupt and transform dominant productions of space/place. I examine the tensions created by these digital practices, particularly with regards to whether they disrupt the production of space/place or, rather, reinforce urban space as a gendered ‘threatscape’.

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Author Biography

Bianca Kate Fileborn, University of Melbourne

Lecturer in Criminology

School of Social & Political Sciences

University of Melbourne

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Published

01-10-2021

How to Cite

Fileborn, B. (2021) “Online activism and street harassment: Critical cartographies, counter-mapping and spatial justice”, Oñati Socio-Legal Series, 11(5), pp. 1198–1221. doi: 10.35295/osls.iisl/0000-0000-0000-1144.