Abstract

In this study, we map and analyze the structure and content of the Saudi Twittersphere and identify the communities that coalesce around different political, religious, social, and cultural topics and viewpoints. This study of the Saudi Twittersphere offers a detailed view of public sentiment and provides insights into the overall structure, discourse, and communities of the network. We look into how users take advantage of the fact that Twitter is an unfiltered media platform to advance their political and social causes. We also examine three case studies centered on issues that received extensive attention on Twitter at the national level during the course of this study.Twitter opens up public space for Saudi citizens to engage in political and social discourse in a country that heavily restricts political speech, civic engagement, and media freedom. This space is technically accessible for public participation, but is shaped by legal measures regulating objectionable content and fear of confrontation with state policies and social norms. These nontechnical factors that constrain users seem to be behind two online behaviors that we observe on Saudi Twitter: users opt to self-censor their online activities to avoid problematic speech, and many of those who take controversial political stands choose to do so using pseudonyms. Within these constraints, the discourse and communities on Twitter reveal intellectual diversity and social divisions. We are able to see who is most interested in what issues and which topics are debated.

Highlights

  • Just a few years ago, the Saudi blogosphere was teeming with activity

  • This study of the Saudi Twittersphere offers a detailed view of public sentiment and provides insights into the overall structure, discourse, and communities of the network

  • We look into how users take advantage of the fact that Twitter is an unfiltered media platform to advance their political and social causes

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Just a few years ago, the Saudi blogosphere was teeming with activity. Participants debated politics, religion, sports, and culture; posted poetry; and chronicled their personal lives. The Kingdom reportedly has the highest percentage of active Twitter users among its online population.[3] Twitter, along with Facebook and other social media platforms, has supplanted blogging as the principal venue for Saudis to participate in the networked public sphere. In. October 2014, for example, the Kingdom’s Grand Mufti criticized Twitter and labeled it as “the repository of scourge and evil and the source of lies and falsehoods.”[20] In addition, state-sponsored religious police known as the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice and religiously motivated activists monitor the Internet for objectionable content and offenders, organize counter-speech campaigns to mobilize society against intellectual movements considered liberal, and compromise websites perceived as objectionable and Twitter accounts of Saudi activists over their allegedly anti-Islam views.[21]. Introduce a special system to hold those who spread rumors responsible. 26

AND METHODS
12 RELIGION-FOCUSED CLUSTERS
18 SPORTS CLUSTERS
19 GENERAL SOCIAL CONTENT CLUSTERS
20 OTHER CLUSTERS
21 REGIONAL CLUSTERS
22 MIXED CLUSTER
KEY THEMES IN THE SAUDI TWITTERSPHERE
Findings
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION
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