« All articles from this issue

Javnost - The Public, Vol. 31 - 2024, Suplement

Guest Edited by Jernej Kaluža and Sašo Slaček Brlek

Medijsko ustvarjanje protibegunskega sovražnega govora v komentarjih na Facebooku

, , pages: S48-S66[open access]

Članek z analizo protibegunskega sovražnega govora v komentarjih v profilih izbranih medijev na Facebooku ugotavlja, kako je bila tema migracij komunicirana in komentirana na spletu v obdobju povečanih migracij v Evropo z Bližnjega vzhoda, iz Afrike in Azije. Kot država na zahodnobalkanski migracijski poti je Slovenija leta 2015 doživela z »dolgim poletjem migracij« povezan porast sovražnega govora, predvsem na spletnih družbenih omrežjih. Na vzorcu 6.545 spletnih komentarjev na objave novičarskih medijev, objavljenih v obdobju 2012–2017, združujemo kvantitativno in kvalitativno analizo proti beguncem uperjenih komentarjev, ki jih je mogoče opredeliti kot sovražni govor, in člankov, pod katerimi se pojavljajo. Analiza kaže, da največ nasilnih komentarjev izzovejo članki, ki pri poročanju o temi migracij uporabljajo senzacionalistično retoriko in poudarjajo deviantna dejanja beguncev. Senzacionalistično medijsko poročanje neposredno soustvarja sovražni govor. Članek je z združevanjem sociološke analize družbeno razdiralnih komentarjev, s premisleki o kazensko pregonljivem izražanju in vplivu družbenih medijev edinstven prispevek k preučevanju vloge, ki jo ima ekonomija pozornosti digitalnih platform pri širjenju sovražnega govora.

Media creation of anti-refugee hate speech in Facebook comments

The article, analyzing anti-refugee hate speech in the comments on Facebook profiles of selected media outlets, examines how the topic of migration was communicated and commented on online during the period of increased migration to Europe from the Middle East, Africa, and Asia. As a country on the Western Balkans migration route, Slovenia experienced a surge in hate speech in 2015 linked to the “long summer of migration”, especially on social media. Using a sample of 6,545 online comments on news media posts published between 2012 and 2017, we combine quantitative and qualitative analysis of anti-refugee comments that can be classified as hate speech and the articles under which they appear. The analysis shows that articles using sensationalist rhetoric and emphasizing deviant actions by refugees provoke the highest share of violent comments. Sensationalist media reporting directly contributes to the creation of hate speech. By combining a sociological analysis of socially divisive comments, with considerations of criminally prosecutable speech, and the influence of social media, the article provides a unique contribution to the study of the role that the attention economy of digital platforms plays in the propagation of hate speech.

Full text PDF (in Slovene) | Export Reference |

« All articles from this issue