Surveillance & Modesty on Social Media: How Qataris Navigate Modernity and Maintain Tradition

Recent research on social media use in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region has focused on their role in the Arab Spring uprisings, but less work has examined the more mundane uses of these technologies. Yet exploring the way populations in the MENA region use social media in everyday life provides insight into how they are adapted to cultural contexts beyond those from which they originated. To better understand this process, we interviewed eleven Qatari nationals currently living in Doha, Qatar. Our analysis identifies ways users, particularly females, practice modesty, manage their own (and by extension) their family's reputation, and use social media to monitor and protect others. These findings are placed within a framework of social, or participatory surveillance, which challenges conventional notions of surveillance as a form of control and instead shows how surveillance has the potential to be empowering.

[1]  D. Radcliffe,et al.  Social Media in the Middle East: The Story of 2017; Key developments, stories and research findings , 2018 .

[2]  D. Radcliffe Social Media in the Middle East: The Story of 2015 , 2016 .

[3]  David W. McDonald,et al.  Dissecting a Social Botnet: Growth, Content and Influence in Twitter , 2015, CSCW.

[4]  Public/private negotiations in the media uses of young Muslim women in Copenhagen , 2013 .

[5]  Mehran Kamrava,et al.  Qatar: Small State, Big Politics , 2013 .

[6]  Yang Wang,et al.  A cross-cultural framework for protecting user privacy in online social media , 2013, WWW.

[7]  Volker Wulf,et al.  'On the ground' in Sidi Bouzid: investigating social media use during the tunisian revolution , 2013, CSCW.

[8]  T. Kane Transplanting education: a case study of the production of 'American-style' doctors in a non-American setting , 2012 .

[9]  Khaled Saleh Al Omoush,et al.  The impact of Arab cultural values on online social networking: The case of Facebook , 2012, Comput. Hum. Behav..

[10]  G. Harkness Out of Bounds: Cultural Barriers to Female Sports Participation in Qatar , 2012 .

[11]  Ekaterina Stepanova,et al.  The Role of Information Communication Technologies in the 'Arab Spring': Implications Beyond the Region , 2012 .

[12]  Alice E. Marwick The Public Domain: Surveillance in Everyday Life , 2012 .

[13]  Bronwyn T. Williams,et al.  New Media Literacies and Participatory Popular Culture Across Borders , 2012 .

[14]  Gloria Mark,et al.  'facebooking' towards crisis recovery and beyond: disruption as an opportunity , 2012, CSCW.

[15]  Asifa Siraj,et al.  Meanings of modesty and the hijab amongst Muslim women in Glasgow, Scotland , 2011 .

[16]  H. Khondker Role of the New Media in the Arab Spring , 2011 .

[17]  J. Wiest,et al.  The Arab Spring| Social Media in the Egyptian Revolution: Reconsidering Resource Mobilization Theory , 2011 .

[18]  Danny Miller Tales from Facebook , 2011 .

[19]  Jennifer Ann Rode,et al.  (Whose) value-sensitive design: a study of long- distance relationships in an Arabic cultural context , 2011, CSCW.

[20]  Danah Boyd,et al.  I tweet honestly, I tweet passionately: Twitter users, context collapse, and the imagined audience , 2011, New Media Soc..

[21]  Alice E. Marwick The Public Domain: Social Surveillance In Everyday Life DRAFT VERSION , 2011 .

[22]  Bryan C. Semaan,et al.  Blogging through conflict: sojourners in the age of social media , 2010, ICIC '10.

[23]  Ban Al-Ani,et al.  Resilience through technology adoption: merging the old and the new in Iraq , 2009, CHI.

[24]  John N. Hooker,et al.  Cultural Differences in Business Communication , 2012 .

[25]  Anders Albrechtslund,et al.  Online Social Networking as Participatory Surveillance , 2008, First Monday.

[26]  K. Tracy,et al.  The Discourse of Crisis in Public Meetings: Case Study of a School District's Multimillion Dollar Error , 2007 .

[27]  T. F. Ruby Listening to the voices of hijab , 2006 .

[28]  Kira Hall,et al.  Identity and interaction: a sociocultural linguistic approach , 2005, Discourse Studies.

[29]  R. Stott,et al.  The World Bank , 2008, Annals of tropical medicine and parasitology.

[30]  Arjun Appadurai,et al.  Disjuncture and Difference in the Global Cultural Economy , 1990 .

[31]  A. Giddens The consequences of modernity , 1990 .

[32]  Dee G. Appley Beyond Culture , 1977 .

[33]  M. Foucault,et al.  The archaeology of knowledge ; and, The discourse on language , 1972 .