CLSIJun 19, 2023

Gender Differences in Abuse: The Case of Dutch Politicians on Twitter

arXiv:2306.10769v11 citationsh-index: 7
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

It addresses concerns about online abuse affecting political participation, with incremental findings on gender and ethnicity interactions.

This study analyzed gender differences in online abuse received by Dutch politicians on Twitter in 2022, finding that male politicians received higher levels of most forms of abuse except threats, and female ethnic minority politicians faced the highest threat levels.

Online abuse and threats towards politicians have become a significant concern in the Netherlands, like in many other countries across the world. This paper analyses gender differences in abuse received by Dutch politicians on Twitter, while taking into account the possible additional impact of ethnic minority status. All tweets directed at party leaders throughout the entire year of 2022 were collected. The effect of gender and ethnic minority status were estimated for six different linguistic measures of abuse, namely, toxicity, severe toxicity, identity attacks, profanity, insults, and threats. Contrary to expectations, male politicians received higher levels of all forms of abuse, with the exception of threats, for which no significant gender difference was found. Significant interaction effects between gender and ethnic minority status were found for a number of abuse measures. In the case of severe toxicity, identity attacks, and profanity, female ethnic minority politicians were more severely impacted than their ethnic majority female colleagues, but not worse than male politicians. Finally, female ethnic minority politicians received the highest levels of threats compared to all groups. Given that online abuse and threats are reported to have a negative effect on political participation and retention, these results are particularly worrying.

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