Harmful disinformation in Southeast Asia: "Negative campaigning", "information operations" and "racist propaganda" - three forms of manipulative political communication in Malaysia, Mmyanmar, and Thailand

Radue M (2019)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2019

Journal

Book Volume: 18

Pages Range: 68-89

Journal Issue: 2

DOI: 10.17477/jcea.2019.18.2.068

Abstract

When comparing media freedom in Malaysia, Myanmar, and Thailand, so-called "fake news" appears as threats to a deliberative (online) public sphere in these three diverse contexts. However, "racistpropaganda", "information operations" and "negative campaigning" might be more accurate terms that explain these forms of systematic manipulative political communication. The three cases show forms of disinformation in under-researched contexts and thereby expand the often Western focused discourses on hate speech and fake news. Additionally, the analysis shows that harmful disinformation disseminated online originates from differing contextual trajectories and is not an "online phenomenon ". Drawing on an analysis of connotative context factors, this explorative comparative study enables an understanding of different forms of harmful disinformation in Malaysia, Myanmar, and Thailand. The connotative context factors were inductively inferred from 32 expert interviews providing explanations for the formation ofpolitical communication (control) mechanisms.

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How to cite

APA:

Radue, M. (2019). Harmful disinformation in Southeast Asia: "Negative campaigning", "information operations" and "racist propaganda" - three forms of manipulative political communication in Malaysia, Mmyanmar, and Thailand. Journal of Contemporary Eastern Asia, 18(2), 68-89. https://dx.doi.org/10.17477/jcea.2019.18.2.068

MLA:

Radue, Melanie. "Harmful disinformation in Southeast Asia: "Negative campaigning", "information operations" and "racist propaganda" - three forms of manipulative political communication in Malaysia, Mmyanmar, and Thailand." Journal of Contemporary Eastern Asia 18.2 (2019): 68-89.

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