Exploring the Use of Social Media for Activism by Mexican Nongovernmental Organizations Using Posts From the 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence Campaign: Thematic Content Analysis
Marian Marian, Ramona L Pérez, Elizabeth Reed, Samantha Hurst, Rebecka Lundgren, Amanda C McClain, Kathryn M Barker

TL;DR
Mexican NGOs use social media campaigns like the 16 Days of Activism to raise awareness about gender-based violence, with popular posts focusing on activism, human rights, and pandemic impacts.
Contribution
This study identifies five key themes in popular social media posts by Mexican NGOs during the 16 Days of Activism campaign, revealing public engagement patterns and gaps in representation.
Findings
Five main themes emerged from highly liked posts: activism, types of GBV, public discourse, human rights, and pandemic impact.
Posts predominantly focused on women and young girls, with limited inclusion of other vulnerable groups.
Highly engaged content reflects critical societal issues and could inform future gender-based violence campaigns.
Abstract
In the past decade, hashtag feminism has emerged in Mexico as a prevalent strategy to build social movements against gender-based violence (GBV). For example, during the global “16 Days of Activism Against GBV” campaign held between November 25 and December 10 each year, Mexico-based nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) turn to X (formerly known as Twitter) to share messages. Despite this prevalence, there is limited research on the type of information shared by these NGO activists on social media and the public’s engagement with these messages. This study aims to explore the themes covered by Mexican NGOs on X and examine what types of messages related to GBV potentially resonated more with the public. We collated and reviewed posts (commonly known as tweets) published in Spanish on the platform X by Mexico-based NGOs between November 25 and December 10 of 2020, 2021, and 2022, a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSocial Media and Politics · Gender, Feminism, and Media · Media Studies and Communication
