Syria in the Arab Spring: The integration of Syria’s conflict with the Arab uprisings, 2011–2013
How did Syria’s conflict interact with the broader wave of regional protest known as the Arab Spring? This article uses a unique, complete Twitter dataset of tweets including the word “Syria” in English or Arabic to empirically test how Syria’s conflict was discussed online. The analysis shows a hig...
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Series: | Research & Politics |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1177/2053168014549091 |
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doaj-58f41ea583d747278c873949dc25ce892020-11-25T03:34:20ZengSAGE PublishingResearch & Politics2053-16802014-10-01110.1177/205316801454909110.1177_2053168014549091Syria in the Arab Spring: The integration of Syria’s conflict with the Arab uprisings, 2011–2013Marc Lynch0Deen Freelon1Sean Aday2The George Washington University, USAAmerican University, USAThe George Washington University, USAHow did Syria’s conflict interact with the broader wave of regional protest known as the Arab Spring? This article uses a unique, complete Twitter dataset of tweets including the word “Syria” in English or Arabic to empirically test how Syria’s conflict was discussed online. The analysis shows a high level of interaction between Syria and other Arab countries through 2011. Other Arab countries experiencing popular protests (“Arab Spring countries”) were referenced far more often in 2011 than were Syria’s immediate neighbors, while keyword analysis shows the framing of the conflict in terms of Syria’s “regime” aligned the conflict with other Arab uprisings. In 2012–2013 this changed sharply, with significantly fewer mentions of other Arab countries, particularly Arab Spring countries, more fundraising and political appeals across the Gulf, and growing Islamization. These findings offer one of the first empirical demonstrations of the integration and disintegration of a unified Arab discourse from 2011 to 2013, with significant implications for theories of the diffusion of protest and ideas.https://doi.org/10.1177/2053168014549091 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Marc Lynch Deen Freelon Sean Aday |
spellingShingle |
Marc Lynch Deen Freelon Sean Aday Syria in the Arab Spring: The integration of Syria’s conflict with the Arab uprisings, 2011–2013 Research & Politics |
author_facet |
Marc Lynch Deen Freelon Sean Aday |
author_sort |
Marc Lynch |
title |
Syria in the Arab Spring: The integration of Syria’s conflict with the Arab uprisings, 2011–2013 |
title_short |
Syria in the Arab Spring: The integration of Syria’s conflict with the Arab uprisings, 2011–2013 |
title_full |
Syria in the Arab Spring: The integration of Syria’s conflict with the Arab uprisings, 2011–2013 |
title_fullStr |
Syria in the Arab Spring: The integration of Syria’s conflict with the Arab uprisings, 2011–2013 |
title_full_unstemmed |
Syria in the Arab Spring: The integration of Syria’s conflict with the Arab uprisings, 2011–2013 |
title_sort |
syria in the arab spring: the integration of syria’s conflict with the arab uprisings, 2011–2013 |
publisher |
SAGE Publishing |
series |
Research & Politics |
issn |
2053-1680 |
publishDate |
2014-10-01 |
description |
How did Syria’s conflict interact with the broader wave of regional protest known as the Arab Spring? This article uses a unique, complete Twitter dataset of tweets including the word “Syria” in English or Arabic to empirically test how Syria’s conflict was discussed online. The analysis shows a high level of interaction between Syria and other Arab countries through 2011. Other Arab countries experiencing popular protests (“Arab Spring countries”) were referenced far more often in 2011 than were Syria’s immediate neighbors, while keyword analysis shows the framing of the conflict in terms of Syria’s “regime” aligned the conflict with other Arab uprisings. In 2012–2013 this changed sharply, with significantly fewer mentions of other Arab countries, particularly Arab Spring countries, more fundraising and political appeals across the Gulf, and growing Islamization. These findings offer one of the first empirical demonstrations of the integration and disintegration of a unified Arab discourse from 2011 to 2013, with significant implications for theories of the diffusion of protest and ideas. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1177/2053168014549091 |
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