The differential impact of women's pariticipation in the Arab Spring

Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited === The Arab Spring protests in 2011 uprooted regimes, challenged authoritarian leaders, and provided protesters new tools for mobilization. The use of social media and the involvement of women in public protests indicated changing protest reper...

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Main Author: Kuhlow, Sasha J.
Other Authors: Baylouny, Anne Marie
Published: Monterey, California: Naval Postgraduate School 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/37655
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-376552014-11-27T16:19:09Z The differential impact of women's pariticipation in the Arab Spring Kuhlow, Sasha J. Baylouny, Anne Marie Mabry, Tristan J. National Security Affairs Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited The Arab Spring protests in 2011 uprooted regimes, challenged authoritarian leaders, and provided protesters new tools for mobilization. The use of social media and the involvement of women in public protests indicated changing protest repertoires and movement demographics in many countries. When women protested in 2011, they mobilized both physically and virtually. Assessing the influence women exert in social movements through social media can provide insights into factors that make a social movement successful. This thesis asserts that women physically mobilized to participate in the Arab Spring protests in Egypt, Yemen, and Bahrain. In Egypt and Bahrain, women also mobilized virtually using social media, while in Yemen women participated through traditional forms of social mobilization. An assessment of Twitter data in Egypt and Bahrain indicates that women communicated out to others more than their male counterparts, while men received more information from others. Data also indicates that women followed significantly more sources of information than men, thus contributing to the diversity of online protest networks. Notably, women represented nearly fifty percent of the most connected users in the Egyptian Twitter data, communicating to nearly twice as many users and following four times as many information sources, as their male counterparts. 2013-11-20T23:36:13Z 2013-11-20T23:36:13Z 2013-09 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/37655 This publication is a work of the U.S. Government as defined in Title 17, United States Code, Section 101. As such, it is in the public domain, and under the provisions of Title 17, United States Code, Section 105, it may not be copyrighted. Monterey, California: Naval Postgraduate School
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sources NDLTD
description Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited === The Arab Spring protests in 2011 uprooted regimes, challenged authoritarian leaders, and provided protesters new tools for mobilization. The use of social media and the involvement of women in public protests indicated changing protest repertoires and movement demographics in many countries. When women protested in 2011, they mobilized both physically and virtually. Assessing the influence women exert in social movements through social media can provide insights into factors that make a social movement successful. This thesis asserts that women physically mobilized to participate in the Arab Spring protests in Egypt, Yemen, and Bahrain. In Egypt and Bahrain, women also mobilized virtually using social media, while in Yemen women participated through traditional forms of social mobilization. An assessment of Twitter data in Egypt and Bahrain indicates that women communicated out to others more than their male counterparts, while men received more information from others. Data also indicates that women followed significantly more sources of information than men, thus contributing to the diversity of online protest networks. Notably, women represented nearly fifty percent of the most connected users in the Egyptian Twitter data, communicating to nearly twice as many users and following four times as many information sources, as their male counterparts.
author2 Baylouny, Anne Marie
author_facet Baylouny, Anne Marie
Kuhlow, Sasha J.
author Kuhlow, Sasha J.
spellingShingle Kuhlow, Sasha J.
The differential impact of women's pariticipation in the Arab Spring
author_sort Kuhlow, Sasha J.
title The differential impact of women's pariticipation in the Arab Spring
title_short The differential impact of women's pariticipation in the Arab Spring
title_full The differential impact of women's pariticipation in the Arab Spring
title_fullStr The differential impact of women's pariticipation in the Arab Spring
title_full_unstemmed The differential impact of women's pariticipation in the Arab Spring
title_sort differential impact of women's pariticipation in the arab spring
publisher Monterey, California: Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/37655
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