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Social Media and Xenophobia: Evidence from Russia

Leonardo BursztynUniversity of Chicago. Department of EconomicsGeorgy EgorovNBER; Northwestern University - Kellogg School of ManagementРубен ЕниколоповInstitute of Political Economy and GovernanceMaria PetrovaBarcelona Graduate School of Economics (Barcelona GSE)
2019en
ABI

Аннотация

We study the causal effect of social media on ethnic hate crimes and xenophobic attitudes in Russia using quasi-exogenous variation in social media penetration across cities. Higher penetration of social media led to more ethnic hate crimes, but only in cities with a high pre-existing level of nationalist sentiment. Consistent with a mechanism of coordination of crimes, the effects are stronger for crimes with multiple perpetrators. We implement a national survey experiment and show that social media persuaded young and low-educated individuals to hold more xenophobic attitudes, but did not increase respondents' openness to expressing these views. Our results are consistent with a simple model of social learning where penetration of social networks increases individuals' propensity to meet like-minded people. Institutional subscribers to the NBER working paper series, and residents of developing countries may download this paper without additional charge at www.nber.org.

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