Abstract

BackgroundSocial media provides women with varying platforms to express themselves, show their talents, communicate and expand their social relationships, and break the shackles imposed by their societies. Theoretically, social media can play a significant role in developing women’s freedom and decreasing social pressures; nonetheless, women continue to face violence during the social media era mainly in the form of psychological violence.ObjectiveThis study aims to conduct an empirical in-depth analysis of how the digital space, particularly social media, provides men with new opportunities to surveil, restrict, harass, and intimidate feminists in Arab countries.MethodsThis study includes an empirical survey to investigate what Arab women think are the causes and types of violence wielded against them and their perspectives on the impact of that violence. This study used a web-based questionnaire administered through Google Forms (n=1312) with responses from Arab women aged 15 years and above from all Arab countries.ResultsWe found that most Arab women feared posting an actual photograph of themselves on their social media accounts and only approximately one-third (490/1312, 37.3%) did so. Most women indicated that they encountered sexual harassment regardless of their age. Furthermore, most women were not aware of the legal aspects of this crime and even those who were aware indicated that they would not press charges for several reasons, including bringing dishonor upon their families, the time-consuming nature of litigation, and fear of revenge.ConclusionsThis study shows that young and less educated women are more vulnerable to abuse from either social media users or being condemned by their families. This has several effects, including lower self-esteem and hesitancy in seeking a job, feelings of mistrust and fear, cynicism, anxiety, depression, and sleep disorders. These issues hold women back from using social media in positive ways and some consider leaving social media.

Highlights

  • BackgroundSocial media provides women with a variety of platforms to express themselves [1,2,3] and show their talents, communicate, expand their social relationships, and break the shackles imposed by their societies

  • The second-most cited reason was cybersecurity, chosen by 138 (10.5%) participants. This reason is important for Arab women, but the majority of them did not highlight this issue because hacking a social media account is not easy and women tend to use social media cautiously (Table 3)

  • The first hypothesis predicted a positive correlation between the level of education of Arab women and posting their personal photograph on social media

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Summary

Introduction

BackgroundSocial media provides women with a variety of platforms to express themselves [1,2,3] and show their talents, communicate, expand their social relationships, and break the shackles imposed by their societies. Social media can play a significant role in developing women’s freedom and decreasing social pressures on them [4]; women face high levels of violence on social media, sexual harassment [5,6,7,8,9]. Conclusions: This study shows that young and less educated women are more vulnerable to abuse from either social media users or being condemned by their families This has several effects, including lower self-esteem and hesitancy in seeking a job, feelings of mistrust and fear, cynicism, anxiety, depression, and sleep disorders. These issues hold women back from using social media in positive ways and some consider leaving social media

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