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dc.contributor.authorJones, MO
dc.date.accessioned2016-10-20T11:51:49Z
dc.date.issued2013-04-01
dc.description.abstractMarc Owen Jones began his PhD at the University of Durham in 2011 after securing a studentship from the North East Doctoral Training Centre. He worked briefly as a graduate research assistant at Leicester University following the completion of an MSc in Arab World Studies from Durham University in 2010. This two-year MSc was funded by the Centre for the Advanced Study of the Arab World and involved a year of intense Arabic tuition at both the Universities of Edinburgh and Damascus. He received his BA in Journalism, Film and Broadcasting from Cardiff University in 2006 before spending a year in Sudan teaching English. He tweets and blogs regularly on Bahrain and his research interests include critical security surveillance, cultural geography, public space, social justice, systemic control, policing and social media. This is a study of how the Bahraini regime and its supporters utilized Facebook, Twitter and other social media as a tool of surveillance and social control during the Bahrain uprising. Using a virtual ethnography conducted between February 2011 and December 2011, it establishes a typology of methods that describe how hegemonic forces and institutions employed social media to suppress both online and offline dissent. These methods are trolling, naming and shaming, offline factors, intelligence gathering and passive observation. It also discusses how these methods of control limit the ability of activists to use online places as spaces of representation and anti-hegemonic identity formation. While there is considerable research on the positive role social media plays in activism, this article addresses the relative paucity of literature on how hegemonic forces use social media to resist political change.en_GB
dc.identifier.citationVol. 9, Iss. 2, pp.69–92.en_GB
dc.identifier.doihttp://doi.org/10.16997/wpcc.167
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10871/23995
dc.language.isoenen_GB
dc.publisherUniversity of Westminster Pressen_GB
dc.rightsThis is the final version of the article. Available from University of Westminster Press via the DOI in this record.en_GB
dc.subjectmediaen_GB
dc.subjectradical alternative mediaen_GB
dc.subjectrevolten_GB
dc.subjectsemi-publisheden_GB
dc.subjectsocial mediaen_GB
dc.subjectsocial networking sitesen_GB
dc.subjectSyriaen_GB
dc.titleSocial Media, Surveillance and Social Control in the Bahrain Uprisingen_GB
dc.typeArticleen_GB
dc.date.available2016-10-20T11:51:49Z
dc.identifier.issn1744-6716
dc.descriptionArticleen_GB
dc.identifier.journalWestminster Papers in Communication and Cultureen_GB


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