革命与侨民:社会网络、无处不在的媒体和国家的非中介化

Jon M. Garon
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引用次数: 2

摘要

本文探讨了社会媒体和数字时代的无中介传播所导致的社会结构的重构,以及国家对公民的领土控制所造成的现代破坏。这种转变在中东地区表现得最为明显,这个地区被武断的政治权宜之计所塑造,并面临着重新定义自身的巨大民众压力。但这些变革不仅仅是突尼斯、埃及、利比亚和叙利亚的民粹主义起义;在亚洲的经济转型和欧洲与北美的经济协调中都可以看到。在所有政治、经济和社会领域,社交媒体和非媒介传播的作用系统性地削弱了国家的作用,并赋予了一种新的网络动态,这种动态将定义21世纪未来几十年。然而,对侨民文学的一项调查表明,尽管社交媒体和互联网时代的通信工具扩大了侨民社区的作用,但它们本质上是一种工具。一些外籍人士社区致力于和平建设和经济发展,而另一些社区则不那么容易驾驭,并利用这些工具资助或促进武装冲突。这些社区本身是异构的,因此任何概括都过于简化了社区及其内部冲突。国家和侨民社区的相对权力正在从国家转移出去——有时会引发额外的冲突。无论角色如何,散居海外的人的重要性将会增加,并在他们的祖国发挥更重要的作用。其作用将由条件和社区决定。
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Revolutions and Expatriates: Social Networking, Ubiquitous Media and the Disintermediation of the State
This article explores the modern disruption of the state as the territorial control over its citizens and the restructuring of these social structures caused by social media and the unmediated communication of the digital age. Nowhere has this transformation been greater than in the Middle East, a region shaped by arbitrary political expediency and under tremendous popular pressure to redefine itself. But these transformations are not merely the populist uprisings of Tunisia, Egypt, Libya and Syria; they can be seen in economic transformations of Asia and economic harmonizations between Europe and North America. In all political, economic and social spheres, the role of social media and non-mediated communication has systematically reduced the role of the state and empowered a new network dynamic that will define the coming decades of the Twenty-First Century. A survey of Diaspora literature, however, suggests that while social media and Internet-age communications tools expand the role of Diaspora communities, they are quintessentially a tool. Some expatriate communities are engaged in peace building efforts and economic development while others are less tractable and using these tools to fund or promote armed conflict. These communities themselves are heterogeneous, so any generalization oversimplifies the community and its internal conflicts. The relative power of the state and the expatriate community are shifting away from the state – sometime evoking additional conflicts. Whatever the role, the significance of the Diaspora will increase and play a more significant part on their former homeland. The role will be determined by the conditions and the community.
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Revolutions and Expatriates: Social Networking, Ubiquitous Media and the Disintermediation of the State Duties of Flag States to Implement and Enforce International Standards and Regulations – And Measures to Counter Their Failure to Do So
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