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AuthorMiladi, Noureddine
Available date2021-06-03T10:07:40Z
Publication Date2016
Publication NameDigest of Middle East Studies
ResourceScopus
ISSN10604367
URIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1111/dome.12082
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/18549
AbstractThe growing impact of new media around the world has been the subject of study by scores of scientists in multidisciplinary fields. Satellite TV and the Internet have been viewed as instruments of social and political change - connecting communities, educating the youth, and creating social networks previously unaccounted for, like virtual groups. However, in the Arab World and the Middle East, such technological developments have been hailed as tools for the empowerment of marginalized communities such as women and the youth, also brought new opportunities that have resulted in the breaking of the communication monopoly by those in power and the creation of a new communication environment. Such environment has - as part of its manifestations - the current social transformations that the region is witnessing. Drawing on examples from social media networks used in Tunisia and Egypt, this article analyzes the extent to which new technologies have changed the rules of the game regarding public opinion construction and the communication flow traditionally monopolized by the hegemonic power structures in Arab society. This study not only reveals the decisiveness of platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube in the Arab Spring countries' revolutions, but also the extent to which their availability served in a complex manner the democratic transition that Tunisia have been undergoing and the political turmoil that Egypt is witnessing. Furthermore this study argues that such online spheres of communication mark the emergence of the virtual yet vibrant space of political campaigning and social empowerment, especially for the youth and marginalized communities. 2016 Policy Studies Organization.
Languageen
PublisherWiley-Blackwell
SubjectArab Spring
Information Warfare
Social Media
TitleSocial media and social change
TypeArticle
Pagination36-51
Issue Number1
Volume Number25


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