2022
DOI: 10.1080/1369183x.2022.2100552
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Catalyst of hate? Ethnic insulting on YouTube in the aftermath of terror attacks in France, Germany and the United Kingdom 2014–2017

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Cited by 13 publications
(9 citation statements)
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References 41 publications
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“…• newspapers are far from the only texts that contain relevant narratives on migration: parliamentary speeches, party manifestos (Ruedin and Morales 2019), policy documents, press releases, parliamentary bills, online videos (Czymara et al 2023;Spörlein and Schlueter 2020), personal diaries, personal correspondence, online posts, or oral histories are just some of the possibilities that come to mind…”
Section: Research Avenuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…• newspapers are far from the only texts that contain relevant narratives on migration: parliamentary speeches, party manifestos (Ruedin and Morales 2019), policy documents, press releases, parliamentary bills, online videos (Czymara et al 2023;Spörlein and Schlueter 2020), personal diaries, personal correspondence, online posts, or oral histories are just some of the possibilities that come to mind…”
Section: Research Avenuesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Employing topic modeling on 51,000 German Tweets posted in the week after the Berlin attack of 2016, Fischer-Preßler, Schwemmer, and Fischbach [41] found that Tweets expressed sympathy for victims but also nationalistic sentiments. Czymara et al [42] showed, based on over 100,000 YouTube comments on immigration-related issues before and after a set of attacks, that ethnic insulting was more present after attacks. Analyzing 11 events related to terrorism and crime, Giavazzi et al [30] showed the language used on German Twitter became more similar to the language used by the rightwing Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) party after such events.…”
Section: The Impact Of Islamist Terrorism On Ethno-religious Hostilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Existing research on social media data mainly favors the explanation of composition effects [42,54,55]. However, these studies have not provided a sensitive test of within-user changes in posting on social media platforms following a terror attack.…”
Section: Hypothesis 3bmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…He claims, for example, that"While al-Qaeda perpetrated only 0.1 percent of all terrorist attacks between 1998 and 2004, it was responsible for nearly 19 percent of total fatalities from terrorist attacks during that time period (Hoffman,2006, p. 88) (Romano et al, 2019). At the same time, a number of fatal terrorist attacks conducted in the name of political Islam have hit several Europeancountries (see Helbling and Meierrieks2020 for an overview) (Czymara et al, 2023).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%