← Volume 12: Challenges and Perspectives of Hate Speech Research
Sharing is Caring
Addressing shared issues and challenges in hate speech research
Sünje Paasch-Colberg, Christian Strippel, Martin Emmer & Joachim Trebbe
Berlin, 2023
DOI 10.48541/dcr.v12.1 (SSOAR)
Abstract: This book is the result of a conference that could not take place. It is a collection of 26 texts that address and discuss the latest developments in international hate speech research from a wide range of disciplinary perspectives. This includes case studies from Brazil, Lebanon, Poland, Nigeria, and India, theoretical introductions to the concepts of hate speech, dangerous speech, incivility, toxicity, extreme speech, and dark participation, as well as reflections on methodological challenges such as scraping, annotation, datafication, implicity, explainability, and machine learning. As such, it provides a much-needed forum for cross-national and cross-disciplinary conversations in what is currently a very vibrant field of research.
Sünje Paasch-Colberg is a Research Associate at the German Centre for Integration and Migration Research (DeZIM) in Berlin, Germany.
Christian Strippel is research unit lead of the Weizenbaum Panel and the Methods Lab at the Weizenbaum Institute for the Networked Society in Berlin, Germany.
Martin Emmer is Professor for Media and Communication Studies at Freie Universität Berlin and PI at the Weizenbaum Institute for the Networked Society in Berlin, Germany.
Joachim Trebbe is Professor for Media and Communication Studies at Freie Universität Berlin, Germany.
Paasch-Colberg, S., Strippel, C., Emmer, M., & Trebbe, J. (2023). Sharing is caring: Addressing shared issues and challenges in hate speech research. In C. Strippel, S. Paasch-Colberg, M. Emmer, & J. Trebbe (Eds.), Challenges and perspectives of hate speech research (pp. 11–22). Digital Communication Research. https://doi.org/10.48541/dcr.v12.1
This book is published open access and licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CC-BY 4.0).
The persistent long-term archiving of this book is carried out with the help of the Social Science Open Access Repository and the university library of Freie Universität Berlin (Refubium).