Student movements jeopardise Bangladesh ruling party

Subject Student protests in Bangladesh. Significance A Dhaka court today denied bail for a second time to photojournalist Shahidul Alam, who was detained on August 5 after sharing videos on social media critical of the government's crackdown on street protests. The ruling Awami League (AL) last month suppressed a multi-day student protest demanding better road safety, after initially offering some concessions to demonstrators’ demands. In July, it cracked down on a similar protest over civil service quota reform after earlier in the year promising to rethink policy. The general election is due by end-December. Impacts Garment workers may take to the streets to demand a higher minimum wage. As the election draws closer, surveillance of social media will increase. Bangladesh will come under growing international pressure to ensure free and fair elections.

Significance Notably, the party defied expectations by reportedly winning comfortably in the capital Addis Ababa. Impacts Ethiopia’s government will invoke the outcome to reject international pressure and perceived encroachments on the country’s sovereignty. As electoral calculations fade, Abiy may have greater scope to make concessions on major national and international disputes. Tigray will remain unrepresented at the national level.


Subject Political crisis in South Korea. Significance President Park Geun-hye, whose leadership has been characterised foremost by scandals and the failure of every major policy initiative, faces her worst crisis yet. She admitted on October 25 to sharing official documents with Choi Sun-sil -- a long-time associate who has no formal post or security clearance. Park sacked all her senior secretaries on October 28, and the next day prosecutors searched the presidential office, and demonstrators called on Park to resign. Yesterday Choi flew back from Germany, where she had been lying low since July, saying she will co-operate with investigations. To opposition outrage, no move was made to arrest her upon arrival. Impacts The crisis is deeply negative for governance, domestically and abroad, especially if lines of authority in Seoul become contested. Park now has no standing left to press any elements of her fraying economic reform agenda. The National Assembly, normally secondary to the executive branch, will become the main locus of power for the time being. Though the ruling party seeks to distance itself, the scandal boosts the opposition's chances of regaining the presidency. The already flagging push (which Park spearheaded) for greater international pressure on Pyongyang will lose further momentum.


Significance This followed the Senate testimony of former Facebook employee and whistle-blower Frances Haugen that the company puts "profits over people". Her critical testimony about the social media giant's alleged harmful effects on democracy and disregard for children’s wellbeing is again raising hopes among the company's critics that Congress will rein it in. Impacts Haugen's forthcoming testimony to the UK parliament and possibly the European Parliament will intensify international pressure on Facebook. Tighter supervision over big tech will be limited by trade-offs between innovation and consumer and societal protections. Facebook may yet revive its Instagram for Kids project.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 61-82
Author(s):  
Shahla Shahnaz Dyuti

The mass student protest for road safety in Bangladesh started in the capital city Dhaka after the death of two students by a road accident. Focusing on the event during 2018, this paper analyses the comments and memes of selected Facebook pages to find out the reactions by netizens towards the protest. Although there are several studies based on protest and social media in different nations, in Bangladesh it remains an under-researched field. Data were collected from four selected public Facebook pages using the thematic analysis method. Through the analysis of the data, it became clear that netizens wanted to express their feelings and thoughts freely in this open space as new media offers them an almost censor-free platform. The findings contribute to understanding how social media plays a role in providing an open platform of freedom of expression.


Subject The outlook for protests and civil society in Myanmar. Significance A 'white armbands' campaign has been founded in solidarity with protesting students, it is reported today, which police are monitoring. Police on March 10 forcibly broke up a student protest over national education legislation at Letpadan, making several arrests. The arrested students are now being released. However, the harshness of the police response has sparked domestic and international criticisms, with fundamental concerns over the progress of Myanmar's democratic transition. Impacts Fresh sanctions on Myanmar are unlikely, although pressure is rising to ensure free and fair elections in 2015. Prosecutions of police personnel involved in the Letpadan crackdown are unlikely. The opposition could benefit electorally from the police crackdown. Military reform is needed for police reform to go forward.


Subject Labour unrest in Bangladesh's garment sector. Significance Union leaders earlier this month said several thousand garment workers had been sacked after recent strikes demanding higher wages, which came despite an increase in the minimum wage. Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s Awami League (AL) government, which won a third consecutive term following December’s general election, is relying on a robust ready-made garments sector to help drive economic growth. Impacts Dhaka will benefit from China-US trade rivalry, drawing more US buyers for Bangladesh’s ready-made garments. Bangladesh will increase garment exports to emerging markets such as Turkey and Russia. Globally, there will be rising awareness of the environmental impact of 'fast fashion'.


Subject Bangladesh's handling of the COVID-19 crisis. Significance The Awami League (AL) government on May 31 lifted a nationwide lockdown, which it imposed on March 26 as part of efforts to prevent the spread of COVID-19. Before the onset of the pandemic crisis, Bangladesh was one of Asia’s fastest-growing economies and the AL’s dominance of politics appeared unchallengeable. Impacts The AL will step up pressure on journalists and activists who are critical of the government. As the economic downturn leads to thousands of garment workers losing their jobs, there will likely be a rise in anti-government protests. Bangladesh will probably miss its target of graduating from the UN’s list of Least Developed Countries by 2024.


Significance Voters will be electing lawmakers for regional and state legislatures as well as parliament’s upper and lower houses. State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for Democracy (NLD), which is defending majorities in both houses, faces a tough challenge from several ethnically based parties. Impacts As the polls draw closer, some populist parties may try to use social media to stoke ultra-nationalist, anti-Muslim sentiment. Doubts among external critics about the fairness of the elections will do further harm to Myanmar’s already damaged reputation. Ethnic parties will try harder to push their agendas in parliament, having lost confidence in the NLD’s ability to advance their interests.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Caitlyn Johnston ◽  
William E. Davis

In the present study, we examined how the influence of exercise-related social media content on exercise motivation might differ across content type (with images vs. without images) and account type (individual vs. corporate). Using a 2 × 2 within-subjects experimental design, 229 participants viewed a series of 40 actual social media posts across the four conditions (individual posts with images, corporate posts with images, individual posts without images, and corporate posts without images) in a randomized order. Participants rated the extent to which they felt each social media post motivated them to exercise, would motivate others to exercise, and was posted for extrinsic reasons. Participants also completed other measures of individual differences including their own exercise motivation. Posts with images from individuals were more motivating than posts with images from corporations; however, corporate posts without images were more motivating than posts without images from individuals. Participants expected others to be similarly motivated by the stimuli, and perceived corporate posts as having been posted for more extrinsic reasons than individuals’ posts. These findings enhance our understanding of how social media may be used to promote positive health behaviors.


2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (6) ◽  
pp. 833-845 ◽  
Author(s):  
Youngsu Lee ◽  
Joonhwan In ◽  
Seung Jun Lee

Purpose As social media platforms become increasingly popular among service firms, many US hospitals have been using social media as a means to improve their patients’ experiences. However, little research has explored the implications of social media use within a hospital context. The purpose of this paper is to investigate a hospital’s customer engagement through social media and its association with customers’ experiential quality. Also, this study examines the role of a hospital’s service characteristics, which could shape the nature of the interactions between patients and the hospital. Design/methodology/approach Data from 669 hospitals with complete experiential quality and demographic data were collected from multiple sources of secondary data, including the rankings of social media friendly hospitals, the Hospital Compare database, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) cost report, the CMS impact file, the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society Analytics database and the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care. Specifically, the authors designed the instrumental variable estimate to address the endogeneity issue. Findings The empirical results suggest a positive association between a hospital’s social media engagement and experiential quality. For hospitals with a high level of service sophistication, the association between online engagement and experiential quality becomes more salient. For hospitals offering various services, offline engagement is a critical predictor of experiential quality. Research limitations/implications A hospital with more complex services should make efforts to engage customers through social media for better patient experiences. The sample is selected from databases in the US, and the databases are cross-sectional in nature. Practical implications Not all hospitals may be better off improving the patient experience by engaging customers through social media. Therefore, practitioners should exercise caution in applying the study’s results to other contexts and in making causal inferences. Originality/value The current study delineates customer engagement through social media into online and offline customer engagement. This study is based on the theory of customer engagement and reflects the development of mobile technology. Moreover, this research may be considered as pioneering in that it considers the key characteristics of a hospital’s service operations (i.e., service complexity) when discovering the link between customers’ engagement through a hospital’s social media and experiential quality.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document