1 / 21

The Internet, Social Media, and Political Information

The Internet, Social Media, and Political Information. The Internet. Low cost information End of geography. “Recent” precedents: information and communications technologies. Ayatollah Khomeini’s tape cassettes Thailand’s 1992 mobile phone mob Arab Spring and social media.

elana
Télécharger la présentation

The Internet, Social Media, and Political Information

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Internet, Social Media, and Political Information

  2. The Internet • Low cost information • End of geography

  3. “Recent” precedents: information and communications technologies • Ayatollah Khomeini’s tape cassettes • Thailand’s 1992 mobile phone mob • Arab Spring and social media

  4. Southeast Asian cases • The Internet and the end of Suharto’s rule in Indonesia in 1998 • Social media to boost the political opposition in Singapore • Use of Internet, social media, community radio in Thailand

  5. Lecture plan • Impact of new technologies on politics • How these media have been used in SEAFocus on:IndonesiaSingaporeMalaysia • Impact on new movement politics in Thailand • Quality of political informationhow much should citizens knowquality of deliberations

  6. Information and politics • Accountability • Boosting the supply of information • Elite strategiesKeep them in the darkDraw the fangs of the mob

  7. Medium as message • Internet as social medium • Reinforcing trends toward privacyniche audiences • Deliberative engagements?

  8. Democracy and citizens’ knowledge • Citizens as voters • Citizens as active participants in their polities • Minimal knowledge requirements of citizens as voters

  9. Making democracy meaningful • Defining democratic competence down • Cues from leaders • Heuristic devices (ideology)

  10. Enabling citizens’ political communications • Newspapersfinding one another

  11. Ubiquity of Internet and social media in SEA

  12. Indonesia • Convivial mediumlow costease of usebroad availabilitydifficulty of monitoring, censoring • Cyber-civic spaces battling suburbs, mobility, privacy

  13. Bringing down Suharto, 1998 • Highly monitored society • Turn to the Internet • Information cascades

  14. Information campaign • Suharto as enemy • Solidarity among his opponents (ephemeral) • State in corrupt hands • Society able to organize itself independent of the state

  15. scandals • Social media bringing attention to malfeasance • Boosting turnout in demonstrations

  16. Malaysia • Considerable censorship • Utusan Malaysia and the NEP • Malaysiakini news website • Social media amplifying offline chatter

  17. 2008 elections • Barisan Nasional lost its two-thirds majorityEffective use of Internet, blogs, SMS, YouTube, listserves

  18. Bersih 2.0 • July 9 rally • Social media expanding circle of participants

  19. Singapore • More Facebook users than voters • Nicole versus Pei Ling • “a watershed for social media”?

  20. Conclusions • More information • Ephemeral coalitions?

  21. Additional readings? • Trendnovation Southeast Asia issue on “Digital Politics,” September 2010, www.trendsoutheast.org • Merlyna Lim, “Cyber-Urban Activism and the Political Change in Indonesia,” in EastBound Journal, 2006, http://www.eastbound.info/journal/2006-1 • www.malaysiakini.com

More Related