The Internet´s role in the Bersih movement in Malaysia – A Case Study

Auteurs-es

  • Melanie Radue

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.29173/irie304

Résumé

Everywhere in the media, people talk about the so-called “Twitter and Facebook revolution” in regard to the Green Revolution in Iran or other new social movements which demand democratization in their countries and use the Internet for communication and mobilization. Libertarian advocates of the Internet state that the Internet has democratizing effects because of its reputed egalitarian, open and free technological structure for communication processes. Especially in countries in which the media is under strict control by the government, these characteristics are emphasized as stimulation for political liberalization and democratization processes. This essay critically examines the alleged democratizing effect of the use of the Internet on the Malaysian society exemplified on the social movement Bersih. The Bersih movement demands free and fair elections in Malaysia, often described as an ethnocratic and “electoral authoritarian regime”. 141 The objective of this study is to demonstrate the dependency of such possible effects on context.

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Publié-e

2012-12-01

Comment citer

Radue, Melanie. 2012. « The Internet´s Role in the Bersih Movement in Malaysia – A Case Study ». The International Review of Information Ethics 18 (décembre). Edmonton, Canada:60-70. https://doi.org/10.29173/irie304.