Online hate speech in polarized political controversies – communicative dynamics and prospects of prevention
Online and offline hatred pose serious harm to victims and a threat to democratic societies. The Network of Excellence for Training on HATE (NETHATE)External link, funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 program (Grant no 861047), enables cross-cutting collaboration among 15 research teams with the aim to understand the dynamics and spread of hate speech as well as mitigation strategies for victims and bystanders. Each project within NETHATE will contribute with an individual research project and goal. In total, NETHATE comprises 15 early-stage researchers and their supervisors spread across 10 universities and one nongovernmental organization (NGO) as the network beneficiaries as well as 14 partner organizations (including ministries, companies, and NGOs).
At the Institute of Communication Science at the University of Jena, Ph.D. candidate Vladimir Bojarskich and Prof. Dr. Tobias Rothmund will study the communicative and psychological dynamics that cause and prevent online hatred within polarized political controversies. For that purpose, they plan to 1) systematically review existing research on the predictors of and interventions against online hate speech, 2) experimentally examine the dynamic causes of online hatred -- with special attention paid to individuals’ social and ideological determinants --, and 3) design and test an intervention directed at its root.
Principal investigator: Tobias Rothmund
PhD student: Vladimir Bojarskich de
Duration: February 2021 - January 2024
Third-party funding : EU Horizon 2020 Marie Skłodowska-Curie Projekt External link