A study of more than 200,000 tweets from 2019 and 2020 finds that anti-immigration content spreads faster than pro-immigration tweets, and that a few users disproportionally generated most of the UK-based anti-immigration content. Andrea Nasuto and Francisco Rowe of the Geographic Data Science Lab at the University of Liverpool, UK present these findings in PLoS ONE on September 4, 2024.
Few anti-immigration users dominate most UK-based Twitter anti-immigration content with rapid spread, high polarization
Reader’s Picks
-
“Birthrates are plummeting worldwide. Can governments turn the tide?” “The world is running out of children as global birth rates [...]
-
Scotland’s care system is taking years to find many of the country’s most vulnerable children permanent homes—and too many of [...]
-
Social media is negatively impacting the life satisfaction of Australian high school students, according to the latest findings from Australia’s [...]