학술논문

Race and Religion in Online Abuse towards UK Politicians: Working Paper
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Subject
Computer Science - Computers and Society
Language
Abstract
Against a backdrop of tensions related to EU membership, we find levels of online abuse toward UK MPs reach a new high. Race and religion have become pressing topics globally, and in the UK this interacts with "Brexit" and the rise of social media to create a complex social climate in which much can be learned about evolving attitudes. In 8 million tweets by and to UK MPs in the first half of 2019, religious intolerance scandals in the UK's two main political parties attracted significant attention. Furthermore, high profile ethnic minority MPs started conversations on Twitter about race and religion, the responses to which provide a valuable source of insight. We found a significant presence for disturbing racial and religious abuse. We also explore metrics relating to abuse patterns, which may affect its impact. We find "burstiness" of abuse doesn't depend on race or gender, but individual factors may lead to politicians having very different experiences online.
Comment: This is an earlier version of a paper currently under review. This version spans January to June 2019 whereas the paper under review covers January to September 2019, as well as adding further analysis