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August 2012

Social Media in Pakistan

Catalyst for Communication, Not Change

Pakistan's Pioneering Women Journalists courtesy by Internews Network/flickr
Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 2.0 Generic Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 2.0 Generic

Pakistan's Pioneering Women Journalists

This report argues that social media in Pakistan serves five important functions: 1) it circulates stories ignored by traditional media, or at least bestows greater attention on them; 2) it facilitates group mobilization, primarily by disseminating information about protests and other social campaigns); 3) it helps coordinate and advertise humanitarian initiatives; 4) it serves as a platform for people to advocate social causes; and 5) it stimulates communication between politicians and their constituents. As a counterpoint to these technology-based advantages, the report then goes on to discuss why social media tools in Pakistan cannot presently produce large-scale change. Two reasons, among others, is that traditional media outlets already serve as change agents and co-opt social media’s ability to play this role, and that the latter still has low penetration rates.

© 2012 Norwegian Peacebuilding Resource Centre (NOREF)

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Michael Kugelman

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