A comparative study of online disinformation and offline protests

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Abstract

This paper evaluates the effect of online disinformation upon offline political protests with a time series cross-sectional sample of 125 countries in a period between 2000 and 2019. The results are mixed. Based on Bayesian multi-level regression modeling, (i) there indeed is an effect between online disinformation and offline protests, but the effect is partially meditated by political polarization. The results are clearer in a sample of countries belonging to the European Economic Area. With this sample, (ii) offline protest counts increase from online disinformation disseminated by domestic governments, political parties, and politicians as well as by foreign governments. Furthermore, (iii) Internet shutdowns tend to decrease the counts, although, paradoxically, the absence of governmental online monitoring of social media tends to also decrease these. With these results, the paper contributes to the blossoming disinformation research by modeling the impact of disinformation upon offline phenomenon. The contribution is important due to the various policy measures planned or already enacted.

Original languageEnglish
Article number232
JournalSN Social Sciences
Volume4
Issue number12
Number of pages18
ISSN2662-9283
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2024

Keywords

  • Comparative research
  • Fake news
  • Freedom of expression
  • Internet filtering
  • Media freedom
  • Misinformation
  • Multi-level regression
  • Propaganda

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