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The Uzbek opposition in exile : diaspora and dissident politics in the digital age

This dissertation examines how dissidents exiled from Uzbekistan use the internet to attempt to refute the legitimacy of the Uzbek government, reinterpret Uzbek culture, and resolve their internal conflicts. I argue that contrary to optimistic predictions of social media revolutions in Central Asia, the internet causes as many problems for Uzbek dissidents as it solves. In particular, I focus on how dissidents reconcile the possibilities the internet provides for collaboration with the dangers of deception, surveillance and slander. I argue that the same qualities that make the internet so liberating--the ability to join and leave a community at will; to write under multiple identities; to draw an immediate and uncensored reaction; to preserve and resurrect old arguments--make it perilous for groups, like the Uzbek opposition, that are already vulnerable to internal conflict

Thesis, Dissertation, English, 2012
Washington University, Saint Louis, Mo., 2012