CLCYMar 4, 2025

Multilingualism, Transnationality, and K-pop in the Online #StopAsianHate Movement

arXiv:2503.02707v1h-index: 2WebSci
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This research addresses a gap in understanding the global spread and long-term sustainability of the #StopAsianHate movement, which is significant for sociologists and activists studying online activism.

The study analyzed 6.5 million #StopAsianHate tweets across 60 languages to investigate the non-English and transnational aspects of the movement, finding that English tweets spiked due to US violent crimes while non-English tweets responded to transnational incidents, and K-pop fans sustained the movement longer than other groups.

The #StopAsianHate (SAH) movement is a broad social movement against violence targeting Asians and Asian Americans, beginning in 2021 in response to racial discrimination related to COVID-19 and sparking worldwide conversation about anti-Asian hate. However, research on the online SAH movement has focused on English-speaking participants so the spread of the movement outside of the United States is largely unknown. In addition, there have been no long-term studies of SAH so the extent to which it has been successfully sustained over time is not well understood. We present an analysis of 6.5 million "#StopAsianHate" tweets from 2.2 million users all over the globe and spanning 60 different languages, constituting the first study of the non-English and transnational component of the online SAH movement. Using a combination of topic modeling, user modeling, and hand annotation, we identify and characterize the dominant discussions and users participating in the movement and draw comparisons of English versus non-English topics and users. We discover clear differences in events driving topics, where spikes in English tweets are driven by violent crimes in the US but spikes in non-English tweets are driven by transnational incidents of anti-Asian sentiment towards symbolic representatives of Asian nations. We also find that global K-pop fans were quick to adopt the SAH movement and, in fact, sustained it for longer than any other user group. Our work contributes to understanding the transnationality and evolution of the SAH movement, and more generally to exploring upward scale shift and public attention in large-scale multilingual online activism.

Code Implementations1 repo
Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes