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Comments on: Social media for social change comes to the Caucasus http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/social_media_for_social_change_comes_to_the_caucasus/ Championing Independent Journalism Wed, 14 Nov 2012 12:24:31 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 By: Onnik Krikorian http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/social_media_for_social_change_comes_to_the_caucasus/#comment-1150 Mon, 19 Apr 2010 22:25:38 +0000 http://www.beta.frontlineclub.com/dev/?p=3794#comment-1150 s geopolitical situation in a region where it is in conflict with two of its four neighbors and the troubled privatization of the ArmenTel monopoly in the late 1990s mean that, in regional terms, the country’s Internet connection speeds remain the slowest, prices remain the highest, and actual penetration remains the lowest. Nevertheless, Internet coverage is increasing in Armenia, especially with the arrival of three cellular phone companies in the market. Additionally, blogs moved in to fill the information gap when a 20-day state of emergency in the aftermath of the bitterly disputed 2008 presidential election imposed restrictions on the mass media. As a result, international donors, such as the World Bank and USAID, are interested in expanding and improving existing infrastructure, and especially using it to empower marginalized groups and communities in society. Even so, it remains to be seen whether such plans can succeed before Armenia’s borders with Azerbaijan and especially Turkey are reopened. The Internet in Azerbaijan By Alexey Sidorenko, Moscow/Warsaw and Arzu Geybullayeva, Baku Azerbaijan boasts the greatest Internet penetration rates of the three South Caucasus countries thanks to government support. The government, political parties, and civil society organizations are developing their on-line presences, including the use of social media. Especially for some progressive youth, the Internet has become a window to the outside world – an opportunity to learn, share, promote and discuss. In particular, blogs and video blogging have become increasingly popular tools for civil society activism in Azerbaijan. Internet, Society and Democracy in Georgia By Alexey Sidorenko, Warsaw Georgian Internet penetration reached 16.5 percent in 2008 and has been growing rapidly in recent years. Georgian users typically access odnoklassniki.ru as their preferred social networking site, but relatively few are bloggers. For most, the Internet is a source of entertainment rather than a tool for political debate or mobilization. While the government promotes a liberal media policy, encouraging Internet use, it maintains the ability to censor the web, a capacity it used during the 2008 Russian-Georgian war.</blockquote> <a href="http://www.res.ethz.ch/analysis/cad/details.cfm?lng=en&id=115031" rel="nofollow">http://www.res.ethz.ch/analysis/cad/details.cfm?lng=en&id=115031</a> ]]> On a related note, the Caucasus Analytic Digest has just published an edition on the use of the Internet in Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia, including one report by yours truly:

Internet in Armenia: Slow, Expensive, but Increasingly Important
By Onnik Krikorian, Yerevan
Armenia’s geopolitical situation in a region where it is in conflict with two of its four neighbors and the troubled privatization of the ArmenTel monopoly in the late 1990s mean that, in regional terms, the country’s Internet connection speeds remain the slowest, prices remain the highest, and actual penetration remains the lowest. Nevertheless, Internet coverage is increasing in Armenia, especially with the arrival of three cellular phone companies in the market. Additionally, blogs moved in to fill the information gap when a 20-day state of emergency in the aftermath of the bitterly disputed 2008 presidential election imposed restrictions on the mass media. As a result, international donors, such as the World Bank and USAID, are interested in expanding and improving existing infrastructure, and especially using it to empower marginalized groups and communities in society. Even so, it remains to be seen whether such plans can succeed before Armenia’s borders with Azerbaijan and especially Turkey are reopened.
The Internet in Azerbaijan
By Alexey Sidorenko, Moscow/Warsaw and Arzu Geybullayeva, Baku
Azerbaijan boasts the greatest Internet penetration rates of the three South Caucasus countries thanks to government support. The government, political parties, and civil society organizations are developing their on-line presences, including the use of social media. Especially for some progressive youth, the Internet has become a window to the outside world – an opportunity to learn, share, promote and discuss. In particular, blogs and video blogging have become increasingly popular tools for civil society activism in Azerbaijan.
Internet, Society and Democracy in Georgia
By Alexey Sidorenko, Warsaw
Georgian Internet penetration reached 16.5 percent in 2008 and has been growing rapidly in recent years. Georgian users typically access odnoklassniki.ru as their preferred social networking site, but relatively few are bloggers. For most, the Internet is a source of entertainment rather than a tool for political debate or mobilization. While the government promotes a liberal media policy, encouraging Internet use, it maintains the ability to censor the web, a capacity it used during the 2008 Russian-Georgian war.

http://www.res.ethz.ch/analysis/cad/details.cfm?lng=en&id=115031

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