The diffusion of social media : links with increased hate crimes against ethnic minorities in Asia

Over the past five years, there has been a rapid increase in documented hate crimes against ethnic and religious minorities, and Asia is no exception. Governments in the region and other stakeholders are increasingly positing that this increase in hate crimes and racist behaviour is enabled by the r...

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Main Author: Bartholomeusz, Steven
Other Authors: Richard Seyler Ling
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/78920
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-789202020-03-09T09:00:12Z The diffusion of social media : links with increased hate crimes against ethnic minorities in Asia Bartholomeusz, Steven Richard Seyler Ling Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Social sciences::Communication Social sciences::Mass media::Media effects Over the past five years, there has been a rapid increase in documented hate crimes against ethnic and religious minorities, and Asia is no exception. Governments in the region and other stakeholders are increasingly positing that this increase in hate crimes and racist behaviour is enabled by the rapid diffusion of social media. Fake news, deliberate falsehoods and violent racist propaganda on social media platforms have played a role in escalating religious and racial tension and violence in several Asian countries. In two recent incidents, the Rohingya crisis in Myanmar, where reports link social media enabled hate speech in prompting violence against Rohingya Muslims, and the Easter Sunday terror attacks in Sri Lanka, where hate speech against Muslims increased in the social media following the identification of the ethnicity of the suicide bombers, we see the ability of social media to disseminate hatred against minorities. With the growing interest to link hate speech propagated via social media as being implicit in inciting hate crimes, the objective of this study is to examine available literature and two incidents of anti-Muslim violence in Myanmar and Sri Lanka, to identify if there is causality between the diffusion of social media and increased hate crimes. The review of 14 academic papers, reports of findings related to Myanmar and an analysis of over 750 Facebook and Twitter posts following the Easter Sunday terror attack in Sri Lanka, support a correlation between hate speech in the social media and hate crimes in Asia, but do not provide enough evidence of causation. Additionally, the study finds an increase in hate speech on social media following terror incidents. In this regard, it recommends that policy and lawmakers in Asia pay attention to events that are likely to spur hate speech on social media as hate speech can be a precursor to hate crimes. Master of Mass Communication 2019-10-29T05:15:36Z 2019-10-29T05:15:36Z 2019 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10356/78920 en Nanyang Technological University 60 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Communication
Social sciences::Mass media::Media effects
spellingShingle Social sciences::Communication
Social sciences::Mass media::Media effects
Bartholomeusz, Steven
The diffusion of social media : links with increased hate crimes against ethnic minorities in Asia
description Over the past five years, there has been a rapid increase in documented hate crimes against ethnic and religious minorities, and Asia is no exception. Governments in the region and other stakeholders are increasingly positing that this increase in hate crimes and racist behaviour is enabled by the rapid diffusion of social media. Fake news, deliberate falsehoods and violent racist propaganda on social media platforms have played a role in escalating religious and racial tension and violence in several Asian countries. In two recent incidents, the Rohingya crisis in Myanmar, where reports link social media enabled hate speech in prompting violence against Rohingya Muslims, and the Easter Sunday terror attacks in Sri Lanka, where hate speech against Muslims increased in the social media following the identification of the ethnicity of the suicide bombers, we see the ability of social media to disseminate hatred against minorities. With the growing interest to link hate speech propagated via social media as being implicit in inciting hate crimes, the objective of this study is to examine available literature and two incidents of anti-Muslim violence in Myanmar and Sri Lanka, to identify if there is causality between the diffusion of social media and increased hate crimes. The review of 14 academic papers, reports of findings related to Myanmar and an analysis of over 750 Facebook and Twitter posts following the Easter Sunday terror attack in Sri Lanka, support a correlation between hate speech in the social media and hate crimes in Asia, but do not provide enough evidence of causation. Additionally, the study finds an increase in hate speech on social media following terror incidents. In this regard, it recommends that policy and lawmakers in Asia pay attention to events that are likely to spur hate speech on social media as hate speech can be a precursor to hate crimes.
author2 Richard Seyler Ling
author_facet Richard Seyler Ling
Bartholomeusz, Steven
format Theses and Dissertations
author Bartholomeusz, Steven
author_sort Bartholomeusz, Steven
title The diffusion of social media : links with increased hate crimes against ethnic minorities in Asia
title_short The diffusion of social media : links with increased hate crimes against ethnic minorities in Asia
title_full The diffusion of social media : links with increased hate crimes against ethnic minorities in Asia
title_fullStr The diffusion of social media : links with increased hate crimes against ethnic minorities in Asia
title_full_unstemmed The diffusion of social media : links with increased hate crimes against ethnic minorities in Asia
title_sort diffusion of social media : links with increased hate crimes against ethnic minorities in asia
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/78920
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