@cczymara@sciences.social
@cczymara@sciences.social avatar

cczymara

@cczymara@sciences.social

Dept of Sociology and Anthropology, Tel Aviv University, IL
& Dept of Quantitative Methods for Social Research, Goethe University Frankfurt, DE

Immigration, attitudes, political communication, quantitative methods, natural language processing, #rstats

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cczymara, to twitter
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Hostility on increases after Jihadist terror attacks.
New study w/ @gorodzeisky in the Journal of , analyzing ~4.5M Tweets from ~1.2M users before and after ten major attacks across five European countries. Available in 🔓 at:

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s42001-024-00272-9

@migrationresearch @communicationscholars @computationalsocialscience

cczymara,
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@gorodzeisky @migrationresearch @communicationscholars @computationalsocialscience

2/4 On average, we find a 10 pp increase in online hostility at the time of the attack. This effect diminishes approximately seven days after the event. There is some heterogeneity across the 10 attacks, but the overall pattern is similar in all cases, see parametric and non-parametric modelling:

image/png

cczymara,
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@gorodzeisky @migrationresearch @communicationscholars @computationalsocialscience

2/3 Deeper analyses reveal that the increase was strongest in Tweets about Muslims/Islam, but also concerned Tweets about migration in general. Fixed effects models show that the overall effect is in part driven by intra-user changes in Tweeting.

As always, replication material is available at: https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/ZDT5B

cczymara, to criminology
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Our research on the (non-)impact of Jihadist terrorism on institutional trust, co-authored with C. Nägel and @amynivette is now published in the European Journal of Political Research @ejprjournal vol. 63, issue 2, pp. 411-432, and is accessible 🔓open access.

@ecpr @politicalscience @criminology

https://ejpr.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1475-6765.12612

cczymara, to migrationresearch
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In what turned out to be a highly topical post for @ecpr_theloop , @acmay and I argue that mainstream parties using nationalist rhetoric unintentionally boost far-right votes by activating exclusionary national identities.

https://theloop.ecpr.eu/mainstream-parties-adopting-far-right-rhetoric-simply-increases-votes-for-far-right-parties/

@ecpr @migrationresearch @sociology

cczymara, to communicationscholars
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My paper on the drivers of migration news in right-wing media now found a home in Mass Communication and Society 27 (1): 50-74. It's also available 🔓 open access, check it out:
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15205436.2023.2240307

@communicationscholars @politicalscience

cczymara, to migrationresearch
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Super interesting debate in the European Sociological Review on the consequences of recording practices in data on anti-refugee violence between Nicole Schwitter & Ulf Liebe, and Arun Frey:

Not Cologne but the data collection (might have) changed everything: a cautionary tale on ignoring changes in data recording in sociological research

@sociology @migrationresearch @criminology

https://academic.oup.com/esr/advance-article/doi/10.1093/esr/jcac057/7272619

cczymara, to politicalscience
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Political elite discourses increase far-right voting by activating exclusionary national identities. New study w/
@acmay (@GESIS) published in based on Manifesto, & data.

Paper available in 🔓 at: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/nana.12985

Replication material: https://osf.io/ntexg/

@politicalscience
@sociology
@migrationresearch @communicationscholars

cczymara, to politicalscience
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Real-world developments such as migration rates, crime, and terrorism predict immigration news in right-wing media. Moreover, these developments also shape the content within immigration news.

In a study recently published in Mass Communication and Society, I analyze more than two decades of news coverage within Germany's largest right-wing newspaper to show this.

🔓Open access at: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15205436.2023.2240307

Replication material: https://osf.io/bwh78/

@communicationscholars @politicalscience

cczymara, to politicalscience
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Happy to share that our study on discursive shifts in Germany's largest right-wing newspaper is now available as open access 🔓
at: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09644008.2023.2231353

@politicalscience @communicationscholars

cczymara, to twitter
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Fernandes & Won: The Unintended Consequences of Amplifying the Radical Right on
in @polcommjournal

"Our findings show that users amplify the radical right’s original message via weak ties and cascade effects in making negative quoted tweets. Ultimately, denouncing the radical right backfires and helps nascent illiberal parties to reach out to more users in the network and gain more users."

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/10584609.2023.2232752

@communicationscholars @politicalscience

cczymara, to Ukraine
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A comparison of refugee attitudes 2015 and today, just published in Nature:

Bansak, Hainmueller & Hangartner: Europeans’ support for of varying background is stable over time

"support for asylum seekers today is, if anything, slightly higher than six years ago at the height of the Syrian refugee crisis"
which is
"a consequence of the socio-demographic composition ... of Ukrainian refugees"

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-06417-6

@migrationresearch @migration @politicalscience @sociology

cczymara,
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It continues: "The findings strongly contradict the idea that the increase in general support is limited to Ukrainian refugees. Indeed, in most countries there is a statistically significant increase in the percentage of accepted non-Ukrainian asylum seeker profiles in 2022 versus 2016... the increased support for refugees extends to other, non-Ukrainian groups of asylum seekers and that there is no evidence of substitution effects"

@migrationresearch @migration @politicalscience @sociology

cczymara,
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And "In stark contrast to the prediction that other refugee groups would face decreased support, we find that the percentage of accepted Muslim profiles has significantly increased in the majority of countries"

@migrationresearch @migration @politicalscience @sociology

cczymara, to sociology
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"We demonstrate that statistical software is used widely but rarely cited in political science, and we highlight a partial solution to this problem: software bibliographies. To facilitate their creation, we introduce softbib, an R package that scans analysis scripts, detects the software used in those scripts, and automatically creates bibliographies."

https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/ps-political-science-and-politics/article/software-citations-in-political-science/CD8EAE80DCEF23816495322E3057E9F7

@politicalscience @rstats @sociology

cczymara, (edited ) to journalism
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How did discourses on cultural , , and change in the last 20 years? In a study just published in German Politics, Leo Bauer and I analyze almost 57,000 articles published in Germany's largest right-wing newspaper, check it out: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09644008.2023.2231353

@politicalscience @communicationscholars @RRResRobot

cczymara, to criminology
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attacks hardly influence in political . In a new study published in the European Journal of Political Research , Christof Nägel, Amy Nivette and I combine causal inference and meta-analysis methods to study rally-around-the-flag effects using 15 years of data from the European Social Survey.

Paper 🔓: https://ejpr.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1475-6765.12612

@politicalscience @migrationresearch @sociology @criminology

cczymara,
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