“…Furthermore, social media is a source of awareness raising, a tool for rapid mobilization (McGarty, Thomas, Lala, Smith, & Bliuc, ; Rainie, Smith, Schlozman, Brady, & Verba, ; Tufekci & Wilson, ), and therefore a general reinforcement to activism (Postmes & Baym, ; Postmes & Brunsting, ; Rainie et al, ) with positive rather than negative impact on offline mobilization (Christensen, ; Enjolras, Steen‐Johnsen, & Wollebæk, ). However, although it is clear that online and offline collective action engagements are strongly connected, the transfer from online participation to offline is affected by many factors, such as societal ones (Honari, ) or by the fact that individuals consider their low‐investment online actions as sufficient (Schumann & Klein, ). Indeed, some have criticized social media as a platform for easy and cheap ‘slacktivism’ replacing other forms of actions (see Christensen, ; Schumann & Klein, ).…”