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%T Policing cyberspace understanding online repression in Thailand and the Philippines
%A Talamayan, Fernan
%J Journal of ASEAN Studies
%N 2
%P 129-145
%V 8
%D 2020
%K cyberspace; algorithm; online repression; sel-censorship
%@ 2338-1353
%X Social networking sites have become increasingly relevant in the study of 
democracy and culture in recent years. This study explores the interconnectedness 
of social networks, the imposition of state control, and management of social 
behavior by comparing various literature on the operation of repression in Thai and 
Philippine cyberspaces. It examines the overt and covert policing of daily 
interactions in digital environments and unpacks governmental technologies’ 
disciplinary mechanisms following Michel Foucault’s notion of government and 
biopolitical power. Subjugation in the context of social networks merits analysis for 
it sheds light on the practice of active and passive self-censorship - the former 
driven by the pursuit of a moral self-image and the latter by state-sponsored fear. 
In tracing various points of convergence and divergence in the practice of cyber 
control in Thailand and the Philippines, the study found newer domains of 
regulation of social behavior applicable to today’s democracies.
%C MISC
%G en
%9 Zeitschriftenartikel
%W GESIS - http://www.gesis.org
%~ SSOAR - http://www.ssoar.info