Document details

The Role of Social Media in Mobilizing Political Protest: Evidence from the Tunisian Revolution

Bonn: Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (2012), 31 pp.

Contains bibliogr. pp. 27-31

Series: Discussion Paper, 10-2012

ISBN 978-3-88985-553-4

Signature commbox: 157:70-Politics 2012

"Drawing on evidence from the popular protests in Tunisia between December 2010 and January 2011, expert interviews with Tunisian bloggers, and a web survey conducted among Tunisian Facebook users, this paper argues that social media (1) allowed a “digital elite” to form personal networks and circumvent the national media blackout by brokering information for outside mainstream media; (2) helped to overcome the “free rider” problem of collective action by reporting the magnitude of protest events; and (3) facilitated the formation of a national collective identity which was supportive of protest action and transcended geographical and socio-economic disparities by providing a shared, mobilizing element of emotional grievance." (Abstract)