Cheerleading Vs Responsive Propaganda: Celia Benhocine
Credit: Mia Advensky

Cheerleading Vs Responsive Propaganda: Celia Benhocine

Check out the fourth video from our Minute Thesis Series, published in the lead-up to the launch of this year’s Chrysalis.

 

Next up: Celia Benhocine and her piece ‘Cheerleading Versus Responsive Propoganda: Evidence from the Women2Drive Protests in Saudi Arabia’. Chrysalis launches on April 13th. Watch for new Minute Thesis videos on Catalyst over the coming week and check out the IDSSA’s socials for updates on how to get ahold of a copy of the journal.

 Celia Benhocine is a fourth year honours student in International Development Studies and Economics at McGill University. Her research interests include social media use in politics, as well as urban political economies, with a current emphasis on the impacts of urban university expansion. Her participation in the POLI 522 seminar forms the basis of the present article and second contribution to Chrysalis. Celia’s most recent work, upcoming in the online publication of PULSE McGill, examines the governance structure of new cities in tandem with democratic participation. Beyond academics, Celia nurtures a passion for music and its community-building affect. She is an active member of McGill’s a cappella community and dabbles in DJing.

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