Results 41 to 50 of about 2,359 (78)
The determined indeterminacy of white supremacy
Abstract Contemporary white supremacy often takes hold through strategies of racial disavowal. One strategy that political parties and regular citizens in Bulgaria use is what I call determined indeterminacy. Determined indeterminacy is a collective, institutionalized method of denying the ubiquitous systemic racism that undergirds social life.
Elana Resnick
wiley +1 more source
Abstract Previous research into the gendered social identity work involved in conspiracy theories (CTs) has largely focused on expressions of masculinity. The present study investigates the employment and mobilization of feminine identities in online Covid‐19 conspiracy theory seminars through a critical discursive psychological perspective.
Ira Frejborg, Katarina Pettersson
wiley +1 more source
When Free Speech Disrupts Diversity Initiatives: What We Value and What We Do Not [PDF]
In this essay, I argue that the debate on free speech as pushed by the conservative right is a strategic apparatus to undermine the various diversity initiatives on college and university campuses. While supporters of the right wing extremists around the
Dutt-Ballerstadt, Reshmi
core +1 more source
Diversity, urban space and the right to the provincial city [PDF]
Using three vignettes of the same physical space this article contributes to understanding of how the right to the city is contested in provincial England in the early twenty-first century.
Amin A. +14 more
core +1 more source
Abstract Passed in December 2019, the Citizenship Amendment Act intensified Hindu majoritarian rule, emerging as another legal measure to systematically deny citizenship to Muslims and other minoritized populations. These legislations were met by protests which were responded to by police violence.
Karishma Desai
wiley +1 more source
Abstract In the aftermath of the war on terror, mosques have become targets for hate groups, leveraging online platforms to amplify global anti‐mosque campaigns. These groups link local protestors with international hate networks, fuelling both online and offline (i.e., onsite) anti‐mosque campaigns.
Gabriel Ahmanideen, Derya Iner
wiley +1 more source
The “Who?” Question in the Hate Speech Debate: Part 1: Consistency, Practical, and Formal Approaches [PDF]
This two-part article addresses the “Who?” question in the hate speech debate: namely, which characteristics, social identities or statuses should or should not be treated as protected characteristics within a body of hate speech laws?
Anton Jaques Miret, Josep +8 more
core +2 more sources
Muslims at the Australian periphery [PDF]
The overt expression of anti-Muslim sentiment is a relatively new phenomenon in Australia. It builds upon racism embedded in history, “clash of civilisations” ideologies and constructs of border-terrorism.
Briskman, Linda, Latham, Susie
core +3 more sources
Post-truth and fake news [PDF]
Media portrayal of politics has always been subject to contested claims about accuracy and veracity but this has reached a new intensity. Erroneous claims and counter-claims are becoming a routine part of political gaming.
Law, Alex
core +1 more source
Propaganda 2.0: Herman and Chomsky’s Propaganda Model in the Age of the Internet, Big Data and Social Media [PDF]
"Thirty years after Chomsky and Herman elaborated the Propaganda Model this title aims to introduce a new generation of readers to it. It presents cutting-edge research demonstrating the model’s general validity as well as new attempts – in the light of ...
Broudy , Daniel +2 more
core +2 more sources

