Thus far, DIGIHATE has started to reach its objectives by combining systematic reviews of available research and a methodologically diverse set of empirical studies.
Specifically, DIGIHATE’s activities, on the one hand, include (a) an umbrella review summarizing comprehensively the current state of meta-evidence concerning digital hate in terms of methodologies, conceptualizations, main findings, as well as main research gaps, (b) three scoping reviews on distinct facets of digital hate (i.e. perpetration, target perceptions, content moderation) where current research is systematized to make visible blind spots in current academic inquiry, and (c) a narrative review about an international public service media project in which interactive prototypes for societally beneficial communication are developed. Systematically diagnosing both research and operational challenges from a bird’s-eye perspective and, based on that, offering feasible solutions provides an important basis for the field to move forward with greater effectiveness and efficiency. Especially, the umbrella review, which was awarded a competitive top paper award, exemplifies essential academic achievements given that digital hate as a novel umbrella concept may be suited to break up a conceptual gridlock where numerous overlapping concepts exist alongside each other in a maze-like field, inhibiting academic developments and averting societal value to emerge.
On the other hand, DIGIHATE has so far conducted a total of eleven methodologically diverse empirical studies, including (a) a two-wave panel survey, a mobile experience sampling study, an eye-tracking lab experiment, three online experiments, and a register study that were conducted in a single country or language region, as well as (b) an expert interview study, two cross-sectional surveys, and an online experiment where country samples from Austria, France, Hungary, and Sweden were recruited. All of these studies represent crucial pieces of the overall project puzzle, following up on our nuanced and heterogeneity embracing general standpoint to explore perceptions, motivations, and consequences of digital hate perpetrators, audiences, and targets from both empowered and disempowered groups. These studies, from which some were awarded with competitive top paper awards and are or will be published in high-quality journals, are first research achievements instrumental in building the basis for subsequent activities within the project.