Hate Online: A Content Analysis of Extremist Internet Sites 论文

2003Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy引用 415
Hate Speech and Cyberbullying DetectionTerrorism, Counterterrorism, and Political ViolenceSocial Media and Politics

详细信息

发表期刊/会议
Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy
发表日期
2003-12-01
发表年份
2003

关键词

Hate Speech and Cyberbullying DetectionTerrorism, Counterterrorism, and Political ViolenceSocial Media and Politics

摘要

Extremists, such as hate groups espousing racial supremacy or separation, have established an online presence. A content analysis of 157 extremist web sites selected through purposive sampling was conducted using two raters per site. The sample represented a variety of extremist groups and included both organized groups and sites maintained by apparently unaffiliated individuals. Among the findings were that the majority of sites contained external links to other extremist sites (including international sites), that roughly half the sites included multimedia content, and that half contained racist symbols. A third of the sites disavowed racism or hatred, yet one third contained material from supremacist literature. A small percentage of sites specifically urged violence. These and other findings suggest that the Internet may be an especially powerful tool for extremists as a means of reaching an international audience, recruiting members, linking diverse extremist groups, and allowing maximum image control.