Does centralization of online content regulation affect political hate speech in a country? A public choice perspective
Date
2024-01-04Author
Arayankalam, Jithesh
Soral, Prakriti
Khan, Anupriya
Krishnan, Satish
Bose, Indranil
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This study primarily examines how the centralization of online content regulation increases political hate speech
in a country. It also explores the roles of the government’s social media surveillance and disinformation in this
relationship. Calhoun’s public choice theory is used as a theoretical foundation to examine relationships. Data
from 179 nations are analyzed using a mixed-method approach (i.e., path analysis and fuzzy set Qualitative
Comparative Analysis), and the findings reveal how centralization of online content regulation results in higher
levels of political hate speech by increasing social media surveillance of political content and disinformation
through social media by the government.
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