'Dark Germany': Hidden Patterns of Participation in Online Far-Right Protests Against Refugee Housing
Sebastian Schelter, J\'er\^ome Kunegis

TL;DR
This study analyzes social media activity of a nationwide German protest movement against refugee housing, revealing temporal peaks aligned with political events and a strong far-right affiliation among participants, despite low direct connectedness.
Contribution
It provides a quantitative analysis of far-right online protest networks in Germany, highlighting temporal activity patterns and political affiliations using social media data.
Findings
Activity peaked in late 2015 around Merkel's refugee policy decision.
Participants showed strong far-right political party affiliation.
Low geographical collaboration among participants was observed.
Abstract
The political discourse in Western European countries such as Germany has recently seen a resurgence of the topic of refugees, fueled by an influx of refugees from various Middle Eastern and African countries. Even though the topic of refugees evidently plays a large role in online and offline politics of the affected countries, the fact that protests against refugees stem from the right-wight political spectrum has lead to corresponding media to be shared in a decentralized fashion, making an analysis of the underlying social and mediatic networks difficult. In order to contribute to the analysis of these processes, we present a quantitative study of the social media activities of a contemporary nationwide protest movement against local refugee housing in Germany, which organizes itself via dedicated Facebook pages per city. We analyse data from 136 such protest pages in 2015,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPopulism, Right-Wing Movements · Hate Speech and Cyberbullying Detection · Social Media and Politics
