This study examines the relationship between online communication by the Proud Boys and their offline activities. We use a supervised machine learning model to analyze a novel dataset of Proud Boys Telegram messages, merged with US Crisis Monitor data of violent and nonviolent events in which group members participated over a 31-month period. Our analysis finds that intensifying expressions of grievances online predict participation in offline violence, whereas motivational appeals to group pride, morale, or solidarity share a reciprocal relationship with participation in offline events. This suggests a potential online messaging-offline action cycle, in which (a) nonviolent offline protests predict an increasing proportion of motivational messaging and (b) increases in the frequency and proportion of motivational appeals online, in turn, predict subsequent violent offline activities. Our findings offer useful theoretical insights for understanding the relationship between online speech and offline behavior.

Bailard, C., Tromble, R., Zhong, W., Bianchi, F., Hosseini, P., Broniatowski, D. (2024). Keep Your Heads Held High Boys!: Examining the Relationship between the Proud Boys' Online Discourse and Offline Activities. AMERICAN POLITICAL SCIENCE REVIEW, 118(4), 2054-2071 [10.1017/S0003055423001478].

Keep Your Heads Held High Boys!: Examining the Relationship between the Proud Boys' Online Discourse and Offline Activities

Bianchi F.;
2024

Abstract

This study examines the relationship between online communication by the Proud Boys and their offline activities. We use a supervised machine learning model to analyze a novel dataset of Proud Boys Telegram messages, merged with US Crisis Monitor data of violent and nonviolent events in which group members participated over a 31-month period. Our analysis finds that intensifying expressions of grievances online predict participation in offline violence, whereas motivational appeals to group pride, morale, or solidarity share a reciprocal relationship with participation in offline events. This suggests a potential online messaging-offline action cycle, in which (a) nonviolent offline protests predict an increasing proportion of motivational messaging and (b) increases in the frequency and proportion of motivational appeals online, in turn, predict subsequent violent offline activities. Our findings offer useful theoretical insights for understanding the relationship between online speech and offline behavior.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Social Networking (Online); Computational Linguistics; Social Media
English
13-feb-2024
2024
118
4
2054
2071
open
Bailard, C., Tromble, R., Zhong, W., Bianchi, F., Hosseini, P., Broniatowski, D. (2024). Keep Your Heads Held High Boys!: Examining the Relationship between the Proud Boys' Online Discourse and Offline Activities. AMERICAN POLITICAL SCIENCE REVIEW, 118(4), 2054-2071 [10.1017/S0003055423001478].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/528024
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