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New Media and Conflict After the Arab Spring

What role did social media play in the Arab Spring? Cyberskeptics and cyberoptimists alike debate the degree to which the 2010-2011 revolutions in Arab countries were powered by social platforms like Facebook and Twitter.

A 2012 study for the United States Institute of Peace, “Blogs and Bullets II: New Media and Conflict After the Arab Spring,” looks at how both tweets and links in Twitter posts were utilized during the Arab Spring uprisings in Bahrain, Libya, Tunisia and Egypt, and the extent of the medium’s influence in the country, the region and the world. The researchers, from George Washington University and American University, limited their investigations to one hashtag per country, links that used the link-shortening protocol bit.ly — which captures critical information about the time, location and identity of link clickers — and posts written in English between mid-January to early April, 2011.

The study’s findings include:

The authors acknowledged that their findings are far from definitive due to methodological and linguistic constraints, and suggested that some Western analysts may have overestimated the impact of social media in Arab Spring. “It is highly unlikely that Twitter allowed Arab Spring protestors to organize protests if few such protestors actually used Twitter during the period in question.”  While the effects of different media were difficult to tease out, the authors found that new media played an important, if not crucial, role.

Tags: social media, Middle East

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By August 6, 2012

Digital Democracy , Global Tech , Human Rights , Social Media