The Mobilization Process of Syria’s Activists: The Symbiotic Relationship Between the Use of Information and Communication Technologies and the Political Culture

Authors

  • Billur Aslan Royal Holloway University of London

Keywords:

ICTs, social media, protests, political culture, Syria

Abstract

Using extensive interviews of Syrian activists and tracing the course of initially peaceful protests, this article explores the mobilization tactics protesters adopted over four distinct phases of Syrian protests up to August 2011. Analysis reveals that in establishing trustful relations and a sense of effectiveness and belonging among the protesters, interpersonal communication was more effective and faster than the hybrid media activities of Facebook administrators. Nevertheless, the uprising’s later stages show that the more protesters became accustomed to protest culture, the more they benefited from ICTs. Many scholars studying ICTs’ role in the protests have advanced the idea that people’s use of the technology—not the technology itself—affected social processes. This study takes this argument a step further to claim that people’s use of technology constitutes a dependent variable linked to the country’s political culture.

Author Biography

Billur Aslan, Royal Holloway University of London

Biography: Billur is a PhD student and tutor based in the New Political Communication Unit at the Department of Politics and International Relations at Royal Holloway, University of London. Billur's thesis is titled: Exploring the Internet as a political opportunity:  (How) can the Internet contribute to political change in Syria and Egypt? She is supervised by Professor Ben O'Loughlin. She holds an MSc in International Relations from Royal Holloway and a BA in Communication from Galatasaray University. Between the years 2010-2011, she worked as a producer in Turkish media. From 2012 to 2013, she was a research assistant on a project exploring global audience reactions to the 2012 London Olympics with the BBC. She is currently working as a research assistant on a project that studies the use of Twitter to comment on the debates between Nick Clegg and Nigel Farage during the last European election campaign with the New Political Communication Unit at Royal Holloway. Postal Address: 240 Varsity Drive, Twickenham, Middlesex, England TW1 1ANE-mail address: Billur.Aslan.2009@live.rhul.ac.ukPhone: 0044 7437 015166 

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Published

2015-07-15

Issue

Section

Articles