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Unlike traditional media, the internet is unstructured, unfiltered, anarchic and
– most importantly – multi-directional. Its users can not only seek out the information they want
but can also become providers and exchangers of
information themselves. In societies where independent
action is frowned upon and no one is supposed to speak out
of turn, this is potentially very subversive.
One of the benefits of the internet for political activists
is ease of communication. Whereas a decade or more ago they
might have had to gather in clandestine meetings or
surreptitiously hand out small numbers of photocopies to a
few acquaintances, nowadays they post information on the
internet where anyone can see it. “Most of them know how
to create a blog, organise a chat group, make phone calls
through a computer and use a proxy to get round
censorship,” Reporters Without Borders noted in its annual
report for 2007. “The web makes networking much easier,
for political activists as well as teenagers.”
Basic information
Mapping the Arabic blogosphere
A detailed study of the Arabic language blogosphere by the Internet
and Democracy Project at Harvard University, June 2009.
Blogging the New Arab
Public
The political impact of blogging in the Middle East, by
Marc Lynch. Arab Media & Society, Spring 2007
Content and
usage of Arabic online forums and groups
By Helmi Noman
Historicising
Arab blogs
Reflections on the transmission of ideas and information in
Middle Eastern history, by Brian Ulrich.
Arab Media & Society, Spring 2009
Reporting a revolution
The changing Arab media landscape, by Lawrence Pintak.
Arab Media & Society
Arab blogs: Or how I learned to stop worrying and
to love Middle East dictators
By Mona Eltahawy.
Arab Media & Society, Spring 2007
Blogging
List of articles published by
Arab Media & Society
New Media and the
New Middle East
Book review by Courtney C. Radsch.
Arab Media & Society, Winter 2008.
The
information revolution in the Middle East and North Africa
by Grey Burkhart and Susan Older. RAND Corporation, 2003
CyberOrient
Online journal of the virtual Middle East
Meet the Bridgebloggers
Who's speaking and who's listening in the international
blogosphere. By Ethan Zuckerman, 2005.
Bahrain
From
blog to street
The Bahraini public sphere in
transition, by Luke Schleusener.
Arab Media & Society, Spring 2007.
Bahrain:
Blogger sued
Global Voices Online, 12 April 2007.
Blogger
in jail for four months
Reuters AlertNet, 29 March 2008.
Egypt
A new direction or more of the same?
Political blogging in
Egypt, by Tom Isherwood. Arab Media & Society, Fall 2008.
Revolutions Without Revolutionaries?
Network theory, Facebook, and the Egyptian blogosphere, by David Faris. Arab Media & Society
Core to
commonplace: The evolution of Egypt's blogosphere By
Courtney C. Radsch.Arab Media & Society, Fall 2008.
Speaking the
unspeakable: Personal blogs in Egypt
By George Weyman,
Arab Media & Society, Fall 2007.
Publicising the private: Egyptian women bloggers
speak out
By Sharon Otterman.
Arab Media & Society, Spring 2007.
Blogging for reform: the case of Egypt
What, if anything, has the blogging-led reform movement achieved to date? By Rania Al Malky.
Arab Media & Society, Spring 2007.
Egyptians on twitter unimpressed with Obama speech
Sarah Carr on reactions to the speech over social media. Daily News
Egypt, 5 June 2009
Iraq
Baghdad Burning: The blogosphere, literature and the art of war Two
case studies, by Wayne Hunt. Arab Media & Society, Winter
2008.
Riverbend. Baghdad Burning
II
Review of the book version of Riverbend’s blog, by Alexandra Izabela Jerome.
Arab Media & Society, Summer 2007.
Salam's
story
The most gripping account of the Iraq conflict came from a web
diarist known as the Baghdad Blogger. But no one knew his
identity - or even if he existed. Rory McCarthy finally
tracked him down ... The Guardian, 30 May 2003.
Salam
Pax
Wikipedia
Lebanon
Social
media in Lebanon's parliamentary elections of 2009
OnOffBeirut, 6 June 2009.
From A-list to
webtifadas
Developments in the Lebanese blogosphere
2005-2006.Can blogs challenge the social
authority of old media? By Sune Haugbolle. Arab Media & Society, Spring 2007.
Uneasy
bedfellows
During the 2006 Lebanon war, bloggers were able to influence the agenda
for traditional media coverage more than ever before. By Will Ward.
Arab Media & Society, Spring 2007.
From Long Island to
Lebanon
Through the 2006 summer war in Lebanon, blogging provided an outlet for
Arabs in America to vent their frustrations, anxieties and criticisms of
events. By Vivian Salama.
Arab Media & Society, Spring 2007.
Libya
Talking
back
How exiled Libyans are using the web to push
for change, by Claudia Gazzini.
Arab Media & Society, Spring 2007.
Morocco
Morocco’s
'video sniper' sparks a new trend
The story of the Targuist Sniper, who filmed the police taking bribes and
posted the videos on YouTube. menassat.com, 12 November 2007.
Palestine
Social media and the Gaza conflict By
Will Ward.Arab Media & Society, Winter 2009.
Saudi Arabia
Saudi
Arabia: rules for internet use
Council of Ministers Resolution, 12 February 2001
OCSAB: Not my thing
Saudi Jeans, 4 April 2006
Cyber-Vigilantes
effect first Saudi blog ban
Aqoul, 4 June 2006.
Religion and extremism
The Islamist opposition online in Egypt and Jordan Pete Ajemian
examines the Internet strategies of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt and the Islamic Action Front in Jordan. Arab Media & Society,
Winter 2008 Young Brothers in
Cyberspace
BY Marc Lynch. Middle East Report, Winter 2007
Cyber
Extremism in Web
2.0
An exploratory study of international jihadist groups, by Hsinchun Chen, Sven
Thoms and T J Fu. Artificial Intelligence Lab, University of
Arizona, 2008.
The Real Online Terrorist
Threat
By Evan Kohlmann. Foreign Affairs, September/October 2006.
Virtually
Islamic
Muslims on the internet (book review)
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