Browsing by Author "El-hakim, Yaseen"
Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item 2021 Canadian federal election, election report: Facebook use by political parties(2022) Boulianne, Shelley; Stevens, Leanne; Mullin, Samantha; Rondeau, Caroline; El-hakim, Yaseen; Johal, Sunpreet; Mamo, NatalieWe coded Facebook posts from a four-week period beginning August 23, 2021 and ending September 20, 2021. A team of six coders were trained using a codebook that includes more than 300 variables. This report covers a handful of the variables. Coders were given a Facebook link, which they opened in one window. Then in another window, they went through an online questionnaire hosted by SoSciSurvey.Item Élection fédérale Canadienne 2021, rapport electoral: l'utilisation de Facebook par les parti politiques(2022) Boulianne, Shelley; Stevens, Leanne; Mullin, Samantha; Rondeau, Caroline; El-hakim, Yaseen; Johal, Sunpreet; Mamo, NatalieNous avons codés les publications Facebook durant une période de quatre semaines, débutant le 23 Août et finissant le 20 Septembre 2021. Une équipe de six codeurs ont été entrainés pour utiliser le livre-code qui contient plus de 300 variables. Ce rapport électoral couvre certaines des variables retrouvées dans le livre-code. Les codeurs ont reçu le lien à une publication Facebook, qu’ils ouvraient dans une fenêtre. Dans une autre fenêtre, ils ont rempli le questionnaire en ligne administré par SoSciSurvey.Item Surrogate memory: a leadership remembering a revolution for Egyptians(2023) El-hakim, YaseenEgypt’s revolution in 2011 has been remembered collectively as an integral event that combines with several uprisings in other Arab states in what is known as the Arab Spring. While the event may have marked a reprieve for Egyptians from the history of persecution that past generations had been subjected to by Egyptian governments, the revolution was unsuccessful in founding a new political era for Egypt. Of the wealth of factors resulting in these circumstances, the military government’s remembering of the event has served a new authoritarian administration well as it has secured their political supremacy and altered what the revolution symbolizes for the nation. Utilizing terms and ideas from collective memory theorists and analyzing crucial events from the aftermath of the revolution, it becomes clearer how challenging it is for a revolution to be commemorated in its original form. Initially, the revolution was seen as a political rebirth for Egypt. Instead, it represented a swift reclamation of the army’s seat of power in government and subsequent self-characterization as heroes of the revolution. Amongst other things, this analysis reveals how easily interpretations of collective memory can affect, and be affected by, macro-level events in the future.