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The goal of this article is to place the role that social media plays in collective action within a more general theoretical structure, using the events of the Arab Spring as a case study. The article presents two broad theoretical principles. The first is that one cannot understand the role of social media in collective action without first taking into account the political environment in which they operate. The second principle states that a significant increase in the use of the new media is much more likely to follow a significant amount of protest activity than to precede it. The study examines these two principles using political, media, and protest data from twenty Arab countries and the Palestinian Authority. The findings provide strong support for the validity of the claims.
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Gadi Wolfsfeld
Brandman University
Elad Segev
Tel Aviv University
Tamir Sheafer
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
The International Journal of Press/Politics
Tel Aviv University
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Reichman University
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Wolfsfeld et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a10ae11f86fae1770b6b2b7 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/1940161212471716