The allows you to attend a daily live cooking class. A format that allowe the channel to record a score of 2.5 million viewers on April 13. In “La p’tite librairie”. The a 1min30 segment. The François Busnel presents a book live from his sofa. The his Lecturer at Grenoble IAE office… or his library of course.
Crisis communities
The new virtual forms of action and being together By Guy Parmentier. The HDR linkedIn database Lecturer at Grenoble IAE. The and Zoé Masson. The PhD student in management. The innovation. The creativity at the University of Grenoble. Post originally publishe on The Conversation and republishe on Méta-Meia with permission. “Being alone together”. The since their confinements. The individuals mobilize online communities. The to support each other. The entertain themselves. The and contribute to stemming the pandemic virus.
Communities are collectives base on geographic
Emotional proximity . The involving direct and authentic interactions between their members”. The according to Quebec sociologist Serge Proulx. The virtual has create a new form of proximity that favors the emergence of nearshoring is one form of offshoring virtual communities. These create affinities between their members . There are two main categories of communities . communities of practice where attention is paid to sharing and learning new ways of doing things. The and epistemic communities. The whose objective is the acquisition of new knowlege.
With the lockdown. The these online communities have grown significantly. Often sale lead mixing the two categories. The could these communities constitute a third category. “crisis communities”? An accelerate implementation process . Lecturer at Grenoble IAEThe context of the Covid-19 crisis has a catalytic effect on the creation of new virtual platforms. Online communities nee time to build themselves. The find their audience and create links between users. The current phenomenon. The on the other hand. The seems to accelerate this process of implementation.