Masterarbeit, 2024
103 Seiten, Note: A
1. INTRODUCTION
1.1. Background of the study
1.2. Statement of research problem
1.3. Objectives of the study
1.3.1. General objective
1.3.2. Specific objectives
1.4. Research questions
1.5. Scope of the study
1.6. Significance of the study
1.7. Limitation of the study
1.8. Organization of the study
2. REVIEW OF RELATED LITERATURE
2.1. Definition and concept of social media
2.1.1. The role of social media
2.1.2. Social media influence during conflict
2.2. Disinformation
2.2.1. Definition
2.2.2. Social media disinformation
2.2.3. The impact of disinformation
2.2.4. Response to disinformation
2.3. Hate Speech
2.3.1. Definition
2.3.2. Social media Hate Speech
2.3.3. The impact of Hate Speech
2.3.4. Response to Hate Speech
2.4. Social Cohesion
2.4.1. The Nexus of social media and social cohesion
2.4.2. The Nexus of hate speech and social cohesion
2.4.3. The nexus of disinformation and social cohesion
2.5. Social Media's Impact on Conflict Dynamics and Social Cohesion
2.6. Trends of Social Media Disinformation and Hate Speech in Ethiopia
2.7. Theoretical Framework
3. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHOD
3.1. Introduction
3.2. Philosophical Foundation
3.3. Methodology
3.4. Research Design
3.5. Sampling
3.6. Data Sources and collection tools
3.7. Data analysis and Interpretation
3.8. Ethical Considerations
4. DATA PRESENTATION AND ANALYSIS
4.1. Background of the Conflict
4.2. Understanding Social Media Dynamics
4.2.1. Predominant Narratives and Themes
4.2.2. Disseminating Disinformation
4.2.3. Disseminating Hate Speech
4.2.4. Regulatory Challenges and Responses
4.3. Implications for Social Cohesion
4.3.1. Undermining Social Cohesion
4.3.2. Immediate Humanitarian Concerns
4.3.3. Erosion of Trust
4.3.4. Undermine National Unity & Social Harmony
4.4. Implication of Peace-building Efforts
4.4.1. Hindrance to Peace-Building Efforts
4.4.2. Inclusive Dialogue and Participation
4.5. Findings
5. CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS
5.1. Conclusion
5.2. Recommendations
This study aims to examine the role of social media platforms in facilitating disinformation and hate speech during the Ethiopian civil war (2020-2022) and to understand the resulting impact on social cohesion within the country. The research seeks to identify predominant narratives, address regulatory challenges, and provide strategies for fostering national unity and reconciliation.
4.2. Disseminating Disinformation
The Ethiopian civil war (2020-2022) saw a significant rise in the dissemination of disinformation, primarily through social media platforms. The Ethiopian federal government and its supporter, as well as the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) and its supporters, utilized these platforms to propagate their narratives often resorting to misleading information to strengthen their positions and undermine their opponents (VOA 17 Oct., 2021). Both sides in the war engaged in extensive misinformation and disinformation campaigns to shape public perception and gain international sympathy (Wardle & Derakhshan, 2017). False reports, exaggerated claims, and manipulated images were widely circulated on social media. For instance, the government’s denial of external actors’ involvement in the war was a case of disinformation, motivated by a desire to placate the international community's concerns over the regionalization of the war. It later emerged that Eritrean forces had been involved in the war since the government declared an offensive against Tigray (Aljazeera, 23 Mar. 2022)
On the other hand The TPLF claimed that those who were killed in Mai Kadra in Western Tigray were Tigrayans. However, reports from Amnesty International, the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission (EHRC), a joint investigation, and various media outlets indicated that the victims were overwhelmingly Amhara. It should be noted that Tigrayans were also killed, reportedly in retaliation for attacks against the Amhara. (Amnesty International, 2022 & EHRC, 2023)
1. INTRODUCTION: Provides the background of the study, defines the research problem, and outlines the objectives and significance of investigating social media's role in the Ethiopian civil war.
2. REVIEW OF RELATED LITERATURE: Explores theoretical frameworks and existing research on social media, disinformation, hate speech, and their impact on social cohesion during conflicts.
3. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHOD: Details the constructive research paradigm and qualitative methods, including content analysis and stakeholder interviews used for the study.
4. DATA PRESENTATION AND ANALYSIS: Examines specific narratives, disinformation, and hate speech campaigns used by conflicting parties and discusses their implications for social cohesion and peace-building.
5. CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS: Synthesizes findings on the dual-edged nature of social media and offers strategic recommendations for content moderation, regulation, and multi-stakeholder collaboration.
Social media, Hate speech, Disinformation, Social Cohesion, Ethiopian civil war, Ethnic tension, Digital discourse, Conflict dynamics, Content moderation, Peace-building, National unity, Information warfare, Online activism, Regulatory frameworks, Media literacy
The research focuses on the impact of social media disinformation and hate speech on social cohesion during the Ethiopian civil war from 2020 to 2022.
The study covers the role of social media in conflict, the dissemination of false narratives, the prevalence of hate speech, regulatory challenges, and the resulting implications for national unity.
The study investigates how the proliferation of disinformation and hate speech on social media not only ignites conflicts but also damages social cohesion in the Ethiopian context.
A qualitative approach is used, utilizing a constructivist research paradigm, content analysis of posts, and in-depth interviews with key institutional stakeholders.
The main chapters analyze the background of the conflict, the dynamics of social media narratives, the specific impacts on social cohesion (such as the erosion of trust), and potential policy recommendations.
The key concepts include Social media, Hate speech, Disinformation, Social Cohesion, and Conflict dynamics within Ethiopia.
Social media served as a battleground where competing narratives were propagated to justify actions, influence international opinion, and mobilize supporters, often by dehumanizing the opposing side.
Representatives from the Ministry of Peace, Ethiopian Human Rights Commission, and other entities provided insights on the challenges of monitoring content and the necessity of better regulatory coordination.
The study concludes that existing regulations and current content moderation efforts are insufficient and that a more robust, multi-stakeholder approach to accountability and media literacy is required.
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