Mac201 arab spring

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Transcript of Mac201 arab spring

Networked journalism and the Arab

Spring#mac201@rob_jewitt

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John Gilmore

“The Net interprets censorship as damage and routes around it”

TIME magazine (6 Dec 1993)

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Outline1. Networked journalism

2. The Twitter revolution?

Lessons from Iran

3. The Arab Spring and

activism

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Transformation of journalism“In the 20th Century making the news was almost entirely the province of journalists… The economics of publishing and broadcasting created large, arrogant institutions – call it Big Media…

Big media … treated the news as a lecture. We told you what the news was…. Tomorrow’s news reporting and production will be more of a conversation, or a seminar…” (2004: xiii)

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Asian Tsunami 2004

London 7/7 2005

Mumbai 2008

US Airways #1549 2009

Networked journalism A term that has been floating around for some

time…

Jeff Jarvis (2006)

Journalism professor at CUNY Graduate School of Journalism; blogger; writer

Charlie Beckett (2008)

Director of Polis, at the London School of Economics; writer; former broadcast editor at BBC, ITN & C4

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Networked journalism

Jeff Jarvis (2006)

“Networked journalism” takes into account the

collaborative nature of journalism now: professionals

and amateurs working together to get the real story,

linking to each other across brands and old

boundaries to share facts, questions, answers, ideas,

perspectives. It recognizes the complex relationships

that will make news. And it focuses on the process

more than the product.

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Networked journalism Charlie Beckett (2008)

The idea that traditional journalism opens itself up to the public. It shares the production process from start to finish. It uses new technologies to include the citizen in every aspect of news-gathering, production and publication. It means using a lot of jargon like crowd-sourcing, social networking, wikisand Twittering. Many of these techniques build on existing journalism methods and are already out there. But it will also require a participatory revolution in the way we make the news.

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Networked journalism

Charlie Beckett (2010)

By ‘Networked Journalism’ I mean a synthesis of

traditional news journalism and the emerging forms

of participatory media enabled by Web 2.0

technologies such as mobile phones, email,

websites, blogs, micro-blogging, and social networks

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#iranelection

A disparate series of events, reports, protests, accounts, links, stories, etc across multiple media

platforms by social agents seeking to redress a

perceived and actual danger

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Top Twitter Trends of 2009

“The terms #iranelection, Iran and Tehran were all in the top-21 of Trending Topics, and

#iranelection finished in a close second behind

the regular weekly favorite #musicmonday.”

Abdur, Dec 15 2009

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10th Iranian election, aka:

Green Revolution

Sea of Green

Twitter Revolution

Persian Awakening

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June 12: The Election Official (disputed!) results:

Ahmadinejad = 24.5 million votes (62.6%)

Mousavi = 13.2 million votes (33.7%)

Over 80% voter turnout

Both claimed they had secured majority of (58-60%) vote

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June 13-14: Protests Mainstream media fingered for poor coverage =

#CNNFail

Al Jazeera English charges Iranian government of direct censorship

Al Arabiya’s Tehran office shut down

NBC News in Tehran raided

BBC World Service claim signal jammed

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June 15-18: Escalation Rumours of Mousavi’s arrest flood the web

Supreme Ayatolla Khomeini initiates partial recount of votes

Iranian football team wear green armbands in game vsSouth Korea

US Govt asks Twitter to postpone its scheduled downtime

Ministry of Culture issues a directive banning foreign media from leaving their offices

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June 19-21: Violence Bloodiest days of violence across the weekend

Social media becomes the main way for citizens to communicate and organise in face of media censorship

Shooting of Neda Soltani by Basij forces becomes a rallying cry against the government

State run television reports 10 killed in Tehran over the weekend

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Some dangers for users

Twitter being used for misinformation

Twitter being monitored by state authorities

(retweet function)

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The Arab Spring

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Revolutionary

wave of protests

throughout the

MENA region,

beginning on 18th

Dec 2010 following

self-immolation of

Mohamed Bouazizi

Tunisia

Corrupt officials under rule of President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali

High unemployment, inflation, police brutality,

and lack of free speech

Mainstream media censorship

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Sidi Bouzid

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Mohammed Bouazizi

Tunisia

17th Dec 2010 – Mohamed Bouazizi’s self-immolation in Sidi Bouzid

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John Gilmore

“The Net interprets censorship as damage and routes around it”

TIME magazine (6 Dec 1993)

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Tunisia

17th Dec 2010 – Mohamed Bouazizi’s self-immolation in Sidi Bouzid

18th-24th street protests result in public being shot

in Bouziane

Protests spread nationally, engulfing Tunis by 27th

14th Jan 2011 – President Ben Ali flees into exile

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Egypt

Jan 25th 2011 - Popular uprising began

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Egypt Jan 25th 2011 - Popular uprising began

26th Jan – Internet and mobile services shut down

28th Jan – Hundreds of thousands protest across Egypt after Friday prayers

29th Jan – Military presence in Cairo increased

2nd Feb – “Battle of the Camel” in Tahrir Square

11th Feb – Mubarak resigns, Armed Forces take over

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Revolutions were tweeted On Sunspace

Focus on Tunisa and Egpyt protests

Analyses different ‘information flows’

Measuring different actors impact and influence

“news on Twitter is being co-constructed by bloggers and activists alongside journalists”

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Conclusion

Civic activism can be supported by coordinated internet activism

Internet “revolutions” may be somewhat

problematic

Depending on circumstances, social media and

networked journalism contributes to a hybrid and

dynamic flow of information.

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In seminars

1. Identify an example whereby networks have been used to break a news story before the

mainstream news media (it doesn't have to be

about the Arab Spring!)

2. Identify any advantages or disadvantages of

information bypassing mainstream media

channels

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In seminars “One possible reading of the current situation on the

ground in Tehran is that, despite all the political mobilisation facilitated by social media, the Iranian government has not only survived, but has, in fact, become even more authoritarian”

Evgeny Morozov, 2010, Prospect Magazine

1. Listen to the interview (link) with Evgeny Morozov (from 7 mins)

To what extent is he right (or wrong) to be skeptical about the power of social media?

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