Geography, asked by whitchsetta2, 1 day ago

Read the excerpt from "The Role of Social Media in the Arab Uprisings" by Heather Brown, Emily Guskin, and Amy Mitchell. Now, research is emerging that reexamines in a more detailed way the role that social media played in the Arab uprisings. In July 2012 a report was published by the United States Institute of Peace. . . . The authors came to some conclusions that countered the initial assumption that social media was a causal mechanism in the uprisings. Instead, the study suggests that the importance of social media was in communicating to the rest of the world what was happening on the ground during the uprisings. . . . Data from the Pew Research Center’s Global Attitudes Project at least somewhat supports this conclusion with its findings that the majority of Egyptians are not online. Nearly two-thirds (65%) of the total population do not use the internet. When looking specifically at those with a college education, use of social media for obtaining political information is more prevalent than in other segments of the population. Though most of the country is disconnected from the internet, 84% of those who are online say they visit social networking sites for news about Egypt’s political situation. These findings point to social media’s important role in spreading information, but do not necessarily indicate that social media was a mobilizing force in the uprisings. Read the excerpt from "The Truth about Twitter, Facebook and the Uprisings in the Arab World" by Peter Beaumont. As commentators have tried to imagine the nature of the uprisings, they have attempted to cast them as many things: as an Arab version of the eastern European revolutions of 1989 or something akin to the Iranian revolution that toppled the Shah in 1979. Most often, though, they have tried to conceive them through the media that informed them—as the result of WikiLeaks, as "Twitter revolutions" or inspired by Facebook. All of which, as American media commentatorJay Rosen has written, has generated an equally controversialist clas

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Answered by shafiasana1
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Answer:

The author supports the claim in the passage by stating that how social media reported on events in the rest of the world during the Arab uprisings.

  • The social media was commonly used as a way to bypass causation. It produced uprising in many Arab nations.
  • People started gathering on various social media platforms to hold meetings. Social media helped to shape the activist groups and they used it to exert their right to speak.
  • Moreover, Bit.ly 's extensive content analysis linked to the uprisings in Tunisia, Egypt , Bahrain and Libya. These links, or short URLs, were mostly used in social media like Twitter.

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