争议空间与自决:埃塞俄比亚数字空间的动态

Q3 Arts and Humanities Northeast African Studies Pub Date : 2021-10-01 DOI:10.14321/nortafristud.21.2.227v
Kebene Wodajo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:政府对人民和民间的关系越来越多地由新兴技术调解和配置,需要新的方式来构建和理解政府和数字技术在社会秩序中的作用。埃塞俄比亚最近的社会政治发展表明,数字平台如何成为有争议的叙事空间,以及社会经济政策和政治观点之间的利益分歧。通过解决2015年至2021年间埃塞俄比亚主要的技术辅助反权力运动,本文研究了数字媒介的遭遇和配置,这些遭遇和配置正在努力产生一种特定形式的主体性。本文通过权力网络理论的视角,考察了数字媒介的遭遇以及数字空间中主要参与者——用户、政府和平台技术——之间的关系模式。这篇文章质疑了国家监控、规则制定和监管杠杆的部署,以及平台技术在调节和抑制自我决定的临界质量出现方面的把关作用。作为一种补救方法,以解决国家-企业交叉配置和监督所固有的风险,文章提出了一种广泛定义但具体情况的隐私权,使自我发展,保护社会和文化建构的新兴自我,并鼓励自决的能力。为了分析隐私权作为一种补救措施,本研究对隐私权进行了批判性的法律分析,重点是1995年的埃塞俄比亚宪法。在整个分析中,它试图强调三个超越埃塞俄比亚具体案例的重要论点。首先,它挑战了数字空间是中立和自由空间的假设。它认为,数字平台为有争议的、对立的叙事和利益提供了场所,并不是数字空间中的每个参与者对数字基础设施都有同等的影响力。因此,数字空间表现出一种不对称的权力关系。其次,它认为公民自我发展和自决的能力日益受到广泛的监督和国家和企业权力的监管杠杆的调节,而国家和企业权力的监管杠杆被用来抑制临界质量的出现。因此,它认为,第三,迫切需要将隐私权的法律保护重新解释为对社会和文化建构的新兴自我的保护。通过满足这一需要,将为自决、批判性主体性和民主的能力提供保护。
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Contested Space and Self-Determination: The Dynamics of Ethiopia's Digital Space
ABSTRACT:Government-to-people and people-to-people relationships are increasingly mediated and configured by emerging technologies, necessitating new ways of framing and understanding the role of government and digital technologies in the social order. Recent sociopolitical developments in Ethiopia demonstrate how digital platforms have become a space for contested narratives and a division of interests between socioeconomic policies and political views. By addressing the major technologically assisted counterpower movements in Ethiopia between 2015 and 2021, this article examines digitally mediated encounters and configurations that are struggling to produce a specific form of subjectivity. The article examines digitally mediated encounters and the patterns of the relationships among main actors in the digital space—users, the government, and platform technologies—through the lens of the network theory of power. The article problematizes the deployment of state surveillance, rulemaking and regulatory leverages, and the gatekeeping role of platform technologies in modulating and suppressing the emergence of a self-determined critical mass. As a remedial approach to addressing the risks inherent in intersecting state–corporate configuration and surveillance, the article proposes a broadly defined yet context-specific right to privacy that enables self-development, protects a socially and culturally constructed emergent self, and encourages the capacity for self-determination. To analyze the right to privacy as a remedy, the study uses a critical legal analysis of privacy rights with a focus on the 1995 Ethiopian Constitution. Throughout the analysis, it seeks to highlight three overarching arguments that have relevance beyond the specific case of Ethiopia. First, it challenges the assumption that the digital space is a neutral and free space. It argues that digital platforms provide venues for contested and rival narratives and interests, and that not every actor in the digital space has equal leverage over the digital infrastructure. The digital space therefore manifests an asymmetric power relationship. Second, it argues that the capacity of citizens for self-development and self-determination is increasingly modulated by expansive surveillance and the regulatory leverage of state and corporate power, which is used to suppress the emergence of critical mass. It therefore argues that third, there is a pressing need for the reinterpretation of legal protection for privacy rights as a protection for a socially and culturally constructed emergent self. By addressing this need, protection will be offered to the capacity for self-determination, critical subjectivity and democracy.
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Northeast African Studies
Northeast African Studies Arts and Humanities-History
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The Quest for Self-Determination and the State in Ethiopia: The Oromo Popular Uprising of 2014–2017 in Historical Perspective Race, Gender, and Pageantry: The Ups and Downs of an African American Woman in Imperial Ethiopia Dr. Abebe Ambatchew (1934–2022) National Integration through Political Marginalization: Contradictions of Nation-Building in Ethiopia The Past of Ethiopia's Present: Unfolding Crises, Cyclical Violence, and Competing Nationalism
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