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Internet can help, not start, democracy

COLUMBUS, Ohio, April 4 (UPI) -- The use of the Internet to promote democracy is most effective in countries already enacting reforms to move in that direction, U.S. researchers say.

The common assumption that the Internet played a major role leading to democratic revolutions in the Arab world and elsewhere is likely an exaggeration, they said.

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"Instead of the Internet promoting fundamental political change, it seems to reinforce political change in countries that already have at least some level of democratic freedoms," researcher Erik Nisbet, a professor of communication at Ohio State University, said.

"Internet use is a less effective means to mobilize citizens for democracy in extremely authoritarian countries," he said in an OSU release Wednesday.

Demand for democracy is highest in countries where more people are connected to the Internet, the researches said, and in countries where Internet users spend more time on the Web.

"Internet penetration in a country matters in terms of how much people want democratic reforms, but it is even more important that people are spending greater amounts of time on the Internet and that they are connected to other people in their community," study co-author Elizabeth Stoycheff said.

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The researchers analyzed data on 28 countries in sub-Saharan Africa and Asia that evaluated how much the citizens in each country demanded democracy and their frequency of Internet use.

Some countries have the right political and technological mix for the Internet to play a role in social and political change, the researchers said, but countries with highly authoritarian regimes are not likely to see democracy flourishing anytime soon regardless of use of the Internet.

"Our results suggest that the Internet can't plant the seed of democracy in a country," Nisbet said. "However, the Internet may help democracy flourish if it has already started to grow."

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