Document details

Democracy's Fourth Wave? Digital Media and the Arab Spring

Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press (2013), xiv, 145 pp.

Contains illustrations, bibliogr. pp. 133-140, index. pp. 141-145

Series: Oxford Studies in Digital Politics

ISBN 9780199936977 (pbk); 978-0-19-993695-3 (hbk)

Signature commbox: 300A:70-Politics 2013

"Philip N. Howard and Muzammil M. Hussain examine the complex role of the Internet, mobile phones, and social networking applications in the Arab Spring. Examining digital media access, level of grievance, and levels of protest for popular democratization in 16 countries in the Middle East and North Africa, Howard and Hussain conclude that digital media was neither the most nor the least important cause of the Arab Spring. Instead, they illustrate a complex web of conjoined causal factors for social mobilization. The Arab revolts cascaded across countries largely because digital media allowed communities to realize shared grievances and nurtured transportable strategies for mobilizing against dictators. Individuals were inspired to protest for personal reasons, but through social media they acted collectively." (Publisher description)