Social Media and Gendered Mobilization to High-Risk Campaigns in Gender-Repressive Contexts: The Case of the 2011 Egyptian Protest Movement

Q2 Social Sciences Sociological Focus Pub Date : 2023-06-18 DOI:10.1080/00380237.2023.2216475
Marian Azab
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Abstract

ABSTRACT Social movements have utilized social media for recruitment since the mid-2000s. Scholars agree that Facebook and Twitter mobilized people during the 2011 worldwide protest wave. However, the literature largely ignores the gendered effect of social media on mobilization. I argue that social media is especially mobilizing for women in high-risk, gender-repressive contexts. In such instances, online ties with fellow citizens offer women access to information about political issues in their countries, the opportunity to articulate political views, and a space to interact with activists. I investigate this claim using the Arab Barometer (2011), which was administered to a representative sample of Egyptians five months after the 18-day protest movement of 2011. I find that social media mobilized women but not men. My findings emphasize the gendered nature of social media and challenge the perception of Egyptian women as either westernized protestors or oppressed non-activists.
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社会媒体和性别动员在性别压制背景下的高风险运动:2011年埃及抗议运动的案例
自2000年代中期以来,社会运动开始利用社交媒体进行招聘。学者们一致认为,Facebook和Twitter在2011年全球抗议浪潮中动员了人们。然而,文献在很大程度上忽略了社交媒体对动员的性别影响。我认为,在高风险、性别压抑的环境中,社交媒体尤其能调动女性的积极性。在这种情况下,与同胞的网络联系为妇女提供了获取本国政治问题信息的途径,表达政治观点的机会,以及与活动人士互动的空间。我使用阿拉伯晴雨表(Arab Barometer, 2011)对这一说法进行了调查,该调查是在2011年18天抗议运动发生5个月后对埃及人的代表性样本进行的。我发现社交媒体动员了女性,而不是男性。我的研究结果强调了社交媒体的性别本质,并挑战了埃及女性要么是西方化的抗议者,要么是受压迫的非活动家的看法。
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来源期刊
Sociological Focus
Sociological Focus Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
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