State Power 2.0 - Muzammil M. Hussain

State Power 2.0

Muzammil M. Hussain

出版社

Ashgate

出版时间

2013-12-02

ISBN

9781409454694

评分

★★★★★
书籍介绍

Digital media and online social networking applications have changed the way in which dissent is organized with social movement leaders using online applications and digital content systems to organize collective action, activate local protest groups, network with international social movements and share their political perspectives. In the past, authoritarian regimes could control broadcast media in times of political crisis by destroying newsprint supplies, seizing radio and television stations, and blocking phone calls. It is much more difficult to control media in the digital age though there have certainly been occasions when states have successfully shut down their digital networks.

What causes state-powers to block internet access, disable digital networks or even shut off internet access? How is it done, what is the impact and how do dissidents attempt to fight back?

In this timely and accessible volume a collection of high profile, international scholars answer these key questions using cases from Israel, Iran, Russia, Morocco, Vietnam and Kuwait and assess the political economy of the actors, institutions and regimes involved and effected by the state-management and control of digital networks.

Muzammil M. Hussain is an Assistant Professor of Global Media Studies at the University of Michigan’s Department of Communication Studies, Faculty Associate at the Institute for Social Research’s Center for Political Studies, and Research Fellow at the Qatar Computing Research Institute in Doha.

Philip N. Howard is Professor of Communication, Information and International Studi...

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目录
Introduction: State Power 2.0; Part I Information Infrastructure and Social Control: Origins of the Tunisian internet, Katherine Maher and Jillian C. York; Censorship and dissent in post-revolutionary Iran, Babak Rahimi; Information infrastructure and anti-regime protests in Iran and Tunisia, Matthew Carrieri, Ronald J. Deibert and Saad Omar Khan; Digital occupation in Gaza’s high-tech enclosure, Helga Tawil-Souri; Leveraged affordances and the specter of structural violence, David Karpf and Steven Livingston. Part II Digital Media and Political Engagement: Technology-induced innovation in the making and consolidation of Arab democracy, Imad Salamey; Al-Masry Al-Youm and Egypt’s new media ecology, David M. Faris; Communicating politics in Kuwait, Fahed Al-Sumait; Social media and soft political change in Morocco, Mohammed Ibahrine; Leninist lapdogs to bothersome bloggers in Vietnam, Catherine McKinley and Anya Schriffrin; Dynamics of innovation and the balance of power in Russia, Gregory Asmolov; Anonymous vs authoritarianism, Jessica L. Beyer; References; Index.
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