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Syrian protests

Syrian protests . BY K.WHITE. Overview. The Syrian Protests started on 26 th January 2011 and escalated by 15 th March 2011. This uprising was influenced by ongoing protests in the region.

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Syrian protests

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  1. Syrian protests BY K.WHITE

  2. Overview. • The Syrian Protests started on 26th January 2011 and escalated by 15th March 2011. This uprising was influenced by ongoing protests in the region. • It started with the Tunisian revolution of January 2011 reached Syria at the beginning of the year when residents of a small southern city took to the streets to protest the torture of students who had put up anti-government graffiti. • President Bashar al-Assad, who inherited Syria’s harsh dictatorship from his father, Hafez al-Assad. At first he went between force and hints of reform. However not long after he starting lifting the country’s old state of emergency, he launches the first of a series of withering crackdowns, sending tanks into restive cities and security forces opened fire.

  3. 8thnovember 2011

  4. Citizen journalism. Video • Citizen Journalism • Definition: The collection, dissemination, and analysis of news by the public, by means of mobile phones, digital cameras, social networking such as Twitter and Facebook etc, blogs, and other forms of technological means.

  5. Impact. • 11 Year Old Boy Killed By Syrian Troops Video. • The media 20 years ago would have found this story hard to report. Why? • NO Citizen Journalism • NO videos or images live directly from the scene during the attack • NO facebook • NO twitter • NO youtube. (Social Networks to upload these to).

  6. Conflict. أن يموت ظلما • Video. • ‘Terrorists kill civilians then fabricate videos saying they only want freedom’ • The Syrian security officers who were meant to be protecting the country and trying to settle it back into order destroyed a family. To tell a mother that her son was shot in his hand then arrested because they were looking for him, for then her to visit the body and find he had been shot several times and murdered. Having to then identify her daughter who had been mutilated, chopped up and burnt. What kind of government is this? The government who cause the trouble but blame everyone but themselves.

  7. Social media. • This story was posted onto twitter by #Syrian. This story would be viewed by people on twitter most probably before anyone viewed their website. • Most people spend their time on social networking than scouring the web for news. Why would you need to when you have apps for these sites in your pocket? Why would you ‘waste’ time looking for the story that’s right infront of your eyes? • The technology we have now is so powerful. 20 years ago this story would have taken hours to get to us.

  8. ….. • Destruction. • By people using social media you can find out information about the world in a split second. I would argue that it is a good thing. I don’t believe citizen journalism puts actual journalists out of a job if anything it helps them. • If they cant make it to a particular place they can still get information and proof of the event by CJ. • Social media was used to video damages made my troops and the protests. It wasn’t so much used on social networking other than short stories. More videos were uploaded onto youtube. A reporter wouldn’t have been able to film these damages as quick as a CJ which creates a wider view in the social media eye.

  9. Theorists. • Dan Gillmor. – Is a citizen journalist. Most of his work appears on blogs on the internet. • ‘I’m also involved in citizen-media efforts, and am a blogger, author, media investor and co-founder of several online businesses’. • @dangillmor • A Facebook poster was one of many online campaigns triggered by reports that the supposed Syrian blogger 'Amina' had been kidnapped in the protests; only later did it emerge that 'Gay girl in Damascus' was a fictional creation. Dan Gillmore suggested they needed more safe guards. • Clyde H.Bentley. • ‘Citizen. Journalism. Simple words but a complex concept variously seen as either the end of the literate media world or the salvation of disconnected civilization.’ • Citizen journalism is no more a replacement for professional journalism than teabags are a replacement for water. Both can stand comfortably alone, but when combined they produce something quite wonderful.

  10. Conclusion.

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