"This book explores how digital authoritarianism operates in India, Pakistan, Turkey, Indonesia, and Malaysia, and how religion can be used to legitimize digital authoritarianism within democracies. In doing so, it explains how digital authoritarianism operates at various technological levels including sub-network level, proxy level, and user level, and elaborates on how governments seek to control cyberspace and social media. In each of these states, governments, in an effort to prolong – or even make permanent – their rule, seek to eliminate freedom of expression on the internet, punish dissidents, and spread pro-state propaganda. At the same time, they instrumentalize religion to justify and legitimize digital authoritarianism. Governments in these five countries, to varying degrees and at times using different methods, censor the internet, but also use digital technology to generate public support for their policies, key political figures, and at times their worldview or ideology. They also, and again to varying degrees, use digital technology to demonize religious and ethnic minorities, opposition parties, and political dissidents." (Publisher description)
1 Digital Authoritarianism and Religion in Democratic Polities of the Global South / Ihsan Yilmaz, 1
2 Digital Authoritarianism and Religious Populism in Turkey / Ihsan Yilmaz, Fan Yang, 21
3 Digital Authoritarianism and Religion in Indonesia / Ihsan Yilmaz, Idznursham Ismail, Syaza Shukri, Hasnan Bachtiar, 53
4 Digital Authoritarianism and Religion in Malaysia / Syaza Shukri, 81
5 Digital Governance and Religious Populism in Pakistan / Ihsan Yilmaz, Raja M. Ali Saleem, 109
6 Hindu Nationalism and Digital Surveillance in India / Ihsan Yilmaz, Raja M. Ali Saleem, 131
7 Digital Authoritarianism, Religion and Future of Democracy / Ihsan Yilmaz, Fan Yang, 151