The Politics of Fear and the Experience of Bangladeshi Religious Minority Communities Using Social Media Platforms

October 19, 2024 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› Proc. ACM Hum. Comput. Interact.

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Authors Mohammad Rashidujjaman Rifat, Dipto Das, Arpon Podder, Mahiratul Jannat, Robert Soden, Bryan Semaan, Syed Ishtiaque Ahmed arXiv ID 2410.15207 Category cs.HC: Human-Computer Interaction Cross-listed cs.CY Citations 5 Venue Proc. ACM Hum. Comput. Interact. Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Despite significant research on online harm, polarization, public deliberation, and justice, CSCW still lacks a comprehensive understanding of the experiences of religious minorities, particularly in relation to fear, as prominently evident in our study. Gaining faith-sensitive insights into the expression, participation, and inter-religious interactions on social media can contribute to CSCW's literature on online safety and interfaith communication. In pursuit of this goal, we conducted a six-month-long, interview-based study with the Hindu, Buddhist, and Indigenous communities in Bangladesh. Our study draws on an extensive body of research encompassing the spiral of silence, the cultural politics of fear, and communication accommodation to examine how social media use by religious minorities is influenced by fear, which is associated with social conformity, misinformation, stigma, stereotypes, and South Asian postcolonial memory. Moreover, we engage with scholarly perspectives from religious studies, justice, and South Asian violence and offer important critical insights and design lessons for the CSCW literature on public deliberation, justice, and interfaith communication.
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