Researchers at UCR used social media sites like Facebook to track the movement’s growth from large urban centers to remote mountain towns.
Sociology professor Christopher Chase-Dunn and graduate student Michaela Curran-Strange helmed the study, which has traced the Occupy Movement to some far-flung locations.
“I found this guy up in Yreka who had lost his house to foreclosure," said Chase-Dunn, referring to the former Gold Rush town north of Mount Shasta, which boasts a population of 7,800.
“And he was angry, and he was trying to start a local Occupy. I don’t think he ever did, but he was trying, and it was one person.”
UC Riverside researchers tracked him down, along with dozens of other California Occupiers, using social media like Facebook and Twitter.
“Basically it’s a cheap way to find out what’s going on in Idyllwild and Weaverville," said Chase-Dunn. "With social movements you wanna study how they diffuse, where do the ideas come from and then where do they go to.”
Some Occupy sites have a handful of campers. Others, like one based in the Northern California town of Arcata, have Facebook followers that number in the thousands. Some groups stage regular public actions; others limit their activism primarily to the Web. More
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