Digital diaspora: The case of Farkhunda and Afghan women’s resistance

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

Digital diaspora : The case of Farkhunda and Afghan women’s resistance. / Waltorp, Karen; Ben Haddou, Sama Sadat.

Middle Eastern Diasporas and Political Communication: New Approaches. Taylor and Francis/Routledge, 2023. p. 107-124.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Waltorp, K & Ben Haddou, SS 2023, Digital diaspora: The case of Farkhunda and Afghan women’s resistance. in Middle Eastern Diasporas and Political Communication: New Approaches. Taylor and Francis/Routledge, pp. 107-124. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003365419-7

APA

Waltorp, K., & Ben Haddou, S. S. (2023). Digital diaspora: The case of Farkhunda and Afghan women’s resistance. In Middle Eastern Diasporas and Political Communication: New Approaches (pp. 107-124). Taylor and Francis/Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003365419-7

Vancouver

Waltorp K, Ben Haddou SS. Digital diaspora: The case of Farkhunda and Afghan women’s resistance. In Middle Eastern Diasporas and Political Communication: New Approaches. Taylor and Francis/Routledge. 2023. p. 107-124 https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003365419-7

Author

Waltorp, Karen ; Ben Haddou, Sama Sadat. / Digital diaspora : The case of Farkhunda and Afghan women’s resistance. Middle Eastern Diasporas and Political Communication: New Approaches. Taylor and Francis/Routledge, 2023. pp. 107-124

Bibtex

@inbook{9dd814dbbc804a43b5cd47db19c24d40,
title = "Digital diaspora: The case of Farkhunda and Afghan women{\textquoteright}s resistance",
abstract = "In this chapter we discuss communication that is political in nature among members of the Afghan diaspora in Denmark, and what social media platforms afford in terms of this communication and its implications. We combine fieldwork, interviews across generations and an (auto)ethnographic approach on the one hand, with aggregated twitter data across larger numbers and across countries on the other. We thus bring together the experiential scale and big data on political communication around this specific case, focusing on how gender politics is invoked by various stakeholders and for various ends across Afghanistan and in diaspora. We start from a specific event: the killing of the woman Farkhunda Malikzada, falsely accused of having burned the Qur{\textquoteright}an in Kabul in 2015. Both old and new media figure in this horrific case. Videos of the event were filmed on smartphones and shared on the internet, journalistic coverage appeared in traditional media outlets, and civil society protests were mobilized in large part through social media. As the case went viral, images and hashtags circulated in social media, while demonstrations and vigils happened on the ground across the Afghan diaspora in the three largest Danish cities and across the world{\textquoteright}s Afghan diaspora. Tangible political outcomes in terms of new legislation and implementation of policies around women{\textquoteright}s rights in Afghanistan did not ensue. The platform of social media, however, has only become more important for Afghans in diaspora and in Afghanistan fighting for women{\textquoteright}s rights and position in society. The Taliban takeover in August 2021 augmented this further.",
author = "Karen Waltorp and {Ben Haddou}, {Sama Sadat}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2024 selection and editorial matter, Ehab Galal, Mostafa Shehata and Claus Valling Pedersen.",
year = "2023",
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RIS

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T2 - The case of Farkhunda and Afghan women’s resistance

AU - Waltorp, Karen

AU - Ben Haddou, Sama Sadat

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024 selection and editorial matter, Ehab Galal, Mostafa Shehata and Claus Valling Pedersen.

PY - 2023/1/1

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N2 - In this chapter we discuss communication that is political in nature among members of the Afghan diaspora in Denmark, and what social media platforms afford in terms of this communication and its implications. We combine fieldwork, interviews across generations and an (auto)ethnographic approach on the one hand, with aggregated twitter data across larger numbers and across countries on the other. We thus bring together the experiential scale and big data on political communication around this specific case, focusing on how gender politics is invoked by various stakeholders and for various ends across Afghanistan and in diaspora. We start from a specific event: the killing of the woman Farkhunda Malikzada, falsely accused of having burned the Qur’an in Kabul in 2015. Both old and new media figure in this horrific case. Videos of the event were filmed on smartphones and shared on the internet, journalistic coverage appeared in traditional media outlets, and civil society protests were mobilized in large part through social media. As the case went viral, images and hashtags circulated in social media, while demonstrations and vigils happened on the ground across the Afghan diaspora in the three largest Danish cities and across the world’s Afghan diaspora. Tangible political outcomes in terms of new legislation and implementation of policies around women’s rights in Afghanistan did not ensue. The platform of social media, however, has only become more important for Afghans in diaspora and in Afghanistan fighting for women’s rights and position in society. The Taliban takeover in August 2021 augmented this further.

AB - In this chapter we discuss communication that is political in nature among members of the Afghan diaspora in Denmark, and what social media platforms afford in terms of this communication and its implications. We combine fieldwork, interviews across generations and an (auto)ethnographic approach on the one hand, with aggregated twitter data across larger numbers and across countries on the other. We thus bring together the experiential scale and big data on political communication around this specific case, focusing on how gender politics is invoked by various stakeholders and for various ends across Afghanistan and in diaspora. We start from a specific event: the killing of the woman Farkhunda Malikzada, falsely accused of having burned the Qur’an in Kabul in 2015. Both old and new media figure in this horrific case. Videos of the event were filmed on smartphones and shared on the internet, journalistic coverage appeared in traditional media outlets, and civil society protests were mobilized in large part through social media. As the case went viral, images and hashtags circulated in social media, while demonstrations and vigils happened on the ground across the Afghan diaspora in the three largest Danish cities and across the world’s Afghan diaspora. Tangible political outcomes in terms of new legislation and implementation of policies around women’s rights in Afghanistan did not ensue. The platform of social media, however, has only become more important for Afghans in diaspora and in Afghanistan fighting for women’s rights and position in society. The Taliban takeover in August 2021 augmented this further.

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