Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Bloggers Seize Influence With the Power of ¦ Live Journal?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenian Bloggers Seize Influence With the Power of ¦ Live Journal?

    The Faster Times
    May 22 2010


    Armenian Bloggers Seize Influence With the Power of ¦ Live Journal?

    May 22, 2010
    by Nicholas Clayton

    When the Live Journal `virtual community' first came online in 1999,
    it basically operated as a venue for whiny American middle-schoolers
    to overshare, write bad poetry and meet pedophiles. At least that's
    how I saw it. I was in middle school at the time.

    Ten years later, after Myspace, Facebook, Twitter, Wordpress, and
    iPhones apps seemed to have successively killed off the first
    generation of blog platforms and social networks, I was stunned to
    find that not only was Live Journal not extinct, but was in fact an
    influential vehicle for grass roots activism, social discussion and
    independent news sharing in Armenia ' a country lacking in all three.

    Armenia is rated `partly free' on democracy and `not free' on the
    status of its freedom of the press by Washington-based pro-democracy
    NGO Freedom House. According to internetworldstats.com little over six
    percent of Armenia's population uses the internet, while most turn to
    exclusively pro-government broadcast media for information. But for
    Armenians, seeing isn't believing.

    According to the OSCE, 10 people were killed March 2008 when the
    government violently dispersed protesters who disputed presidential
    elections widely considered to be fraudulent. The mainstream media
    coverage of this event, however, proved to be to a total
    pro-government wash, causing confidence in media institutions to
    plummet and blogging boomed.

    Today, Armenia's most popular bloggers get tens of thousands of page
    views a day while the average circulation of Yerevan's many newspapers
    is around 3,000 each. The community of approximately 500 live journals
    and stand-alone blogs has become an active force in Armenian society,
    meeting in person and in cyberspace to organize petition campaigns and
    flash mobs to protest local policies and use their growing influence
    to spread information.

    The government has taken notice.

    Artur Papyan, creator of the Armenian Observer Blog, said government
    officials have hired staffs of consultants to deal with the phenomenon
    and many high-ranking officials have created blogs of their own. And,
    earlier this month, when unveiling a controversial new proposal to
    create a small number of foreign language schools in Armenia, Armenian
    Education Minister Armen Ashotyan held a nearly 3-hour-long meeting
    with various bloggers to present the government's plan.

    This makes Armenia a unique case as blogging in the other two
    countries of the Caucasus region, Georgia and Azerbaijan, largely
    reflects each of the countries' respective political environments. In
    pro-Western Georgia, where freedom of expression is arguably the most
    respected, the number of blogs is higher, but the blogging community
    has a much smaller impact on the political dialogue, and in
    dictatorial Azerbaijan nearly all blogs are apolitical ' with two
    political bloggers already having been sent to prison for
    `hooliganism.'

    In Armenia, meanwhile, the contrast between the country's largely
    closed political and media society and the level to which new media
    has been able to drive the discourse is striking.

    Not all Armenians are optimistic about the future of its small,
    influential blogging community, however. Anna Simonyan, one of the
    founders of the online magazine Yerevan.ru, which heavily incorporates
    blogging into its interactive format, believes that Facebook,
    currently the fastest growing social network in Armenia, will
    gradually usurp the discussion. Independent bloggers will either be
    disempowered, or will take salaried positions in media organizations
    and will be gradually brought into the fold, as very few have made any
    real advertising money from their blogging exploits.

    But information security analyst and blogger Samvel Martirosyan
    disagrees. He said that Yerevan's blogging community is already seeing
    a collaboration between individuals using both Live Journal and
    Facebook.

    `It is a real cooperation; Facebook is good for activism, but blogs
    are better for brainstorming, creating ideas,' he said. `Platform is
    nothing, the idea is everything.'

    In the end, although Armenia's levels of internet penetration affects
    the impact of new media activism within its borders, it hasn't been an
    obstacle for the overall consumption of blogs as much of the existing
    Armenian blogosphere is geared more towards the larger, more
    internet-savvy Armenian diaspora, which greatly outnumbers the
    population of the small Caucasus nation of 3.5 million.

    With issues like the normalization of ties with Turkey, resolving the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with Azerbaijan and balancing the influence
    of America, Russia and Iran on the country's politics and economy '
    issues on which residents and diaspora are often fiercely divided '
    there's bound to be plenty to talk about and plenty of places to do it
    for years to come.

    To keep seeing more updates on Armenia and more, check out TFT's
    membership plans!

    Become a Member of The Faster Times today for as little $12 and you'll
    receive lots of great gifts ' plus the good feeling that comes with
    supporting a team of independent journalists who are trying to create
    a new model for the newspaper. (Sign up right away to make sure you
    receive an invite to our first members-only event).

    http://thefastertimes.com/armenia/2010/05 /22/armenian-bloggers-seize-influence-with-the-pow er-of-live-journal/
Working...
X