The purpose of this paper is to reflect on how potential circumventing media and communication technologies could potentially assist the information flow when authoritarian regimes decide to block the main channels, such as the Internet and the mobile phone networks. The point of departure is the recent Internet blackouts in countries in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), such as Egypt, Bahrain and Libya. We discuss several applications that were developed as a re- sponse to state repression in these countries, and their future potential that would allow people to communicate more freely despite Internet and mobile network blackouts
At the beginning of 2011, revolution across the MENA region threw into question the potential power ...
The use of the Internet for political action by non-state dissident actors in the Middle East by W. ...
This paper examines how non-state dissident actors in the Middle East use the Internet for political...
The purpose of this paper is to reflect on how potential circumventing media and communication techn...
Studies have shown that authoritarian regimes tend to censor the media to limit potential threats to...
Studies have shown that authoritarian regimes tend to censor the media to limit potential threats to...
This article offers a first subnational analysis of the relationship between states' dynamic control...
It is widely believed that the Internet poses an insurmountable threat to authoritarian rule. But po...
It is widely believed that the Internet poses an insurmountable threat to authoritarian rule. But po...
Digital media and online social networking applications have changed the way in which dissent is org...
The reported role of social media in recent popular uprisings against Arab autocrats has fueled the ...
In this essay the authors investigate how authoritarian regimes use internet technology to respond t...
The Internet and social media are being corrupted into authoritarian tools by autocrats and regimes,...
This article offers a first subnational analysis of the relationship between states’ dynamic control...
This research focuses on the role the Information Communication Technologies (ICTs) played in the Mi...
At the beginning of 2011, revolution across the MENA region threw into question the potential power ...
The use of the Internet for political action by non-state dissident actors in the Middle East by W. ...
This paper examines how non-state dissident actors in the Middle East use the Internet for political...
The purpose of this paper is to reflect on how potential circumventing media and communication techn...
Studies have shown that authoritarian regimes tend to censor the media to limit potential threats to...
Studies have shown that authoritarian regimes tend to censor the media to limit potential threats to...
This article offers a first subnational analysis of the relationship between states' dynamic control...
It is widely believed that the Internet poses an insurmountable threat to authoritarian rule. But po...
It is widely believed that the Internet poses an insurmountable threat to authoritarian rule. But po...
Digital media and online social networking applications have changed the way in which dissent is org...
The reported role of social media in recent popular uprisings against Arab autocrats has fueled the ...
In this essay the authors investigate how authoritarian regimes use internet technology to respond t...
The Internet and social media are being corrupted into authoritarian tools by autocrats and regimes,...
This article offers a first subnational analysis of the relationship between states’ dynamic control...
This research focuses on the role the Information Communication Technologies (ICTs) played in the Mi...
At the beginning of 2011, revolution across the MENA region threw into question the potential power ...
The use of the Internet for political action by non-state dissident actors in the Middle East by W. ...
This paper examines how non-state dissident actors in the Middle East use the Internet for political...