Mapping White identity terrorism and racially or ethnically motivated violent extremism : a social network analysis of online activity /


Heather J. Williams, Luke J. Matthews, Pauline Moore, Matthew A. Denardo, James V. Marrone, Brian A. Jackson, William Marcellino, Todd C. Helmus.
Bok Engelsk 2022
Annen tittel
Utgitt
RAND Corporation , 2022
Opplysninger
CHAPTER ONE: Overview -- CHAPTER TWO: Literature Review -- CHAPTER THREE: Network Analysis of WITM and REMVE -- CHAPTER FOUR: Country Case Studies -- CHAPTER FIVE: Conclusion and Opportunities for Impact -- APPENDIX A: White Genocide Terms -- APPENDIX B: Triangulating Platform Antisociality: Dark Triad by Sentiment -- APPENDIX C: Longitudinal Analysis of Highest-Scoring Dark Triad Communities Across Platforms -- APPENDIX D: Simulations of Deplatforming or Other Counter-REMVE Action in Online Networks -- APPENDIX E: Religion and Christianity Keywords Applied to Twitter -- APPENDIX F: Dendrogram of Lexical Similarities by Location on Twitter.. - Racially or ethnically motivated violent extremism (REMVE) and extremists (REMVEs) present some of the most pressing threats to the United States. REMVE also has been identified as the White identity terrorist movement (WITM). REMVEs are among the most lethal domestic violent extremists, and they are the most likely to commit mass-casualty attacks. These movements are characterized by a broad ideological orientation toward xenophobic, anti-Semitic, racist, and misogynistic sentiment. For this report, the authors reviewed the relevant literature on REMVE networks and collected and analyzed social media data from six social networks (Twitter, Reddit, Gab, Ruqqus, Telegram, and Stormfront) to produce a global network map of the digital REMVE space. That network map evaluates each network's construction, connectivity, geographic location, references to prominent organizations, and proclivity to violence. The authors also reviewed ten countries' experiences with REMVE to sketch out an understanding of the REMVE space in these countries and how REMVEs in those countries relate to those in the United States.
Emner
Geografisk emneord
United States. : (OCoLC)fst01204155
Dewey

Bibliotek som har denne