Two sides to every tweet: Exploring the framing, predictors, and associated consequences of online shaming
Access Status
Open access
Date
2023Supervisor
Peter McEvoy
David Garratt-Reed
Type
Thesis
Award
PhD
Metadata
Show full item recordFaculty
Health Sciences
School
School of Population Health
Collection
Abstract
Online shaming, whereby individuals call out real or perceived wrongdoings online, has become an ever-increasing, global form of social policing. Despite the negative consequences associated with this phenomenon, most existing discussion and debate is anecdotal and media-based, with current understandings largely non-empirical, theoretical, and overall scarce. The overarching aim of this thesis was to explore the framing, predictors, and associated consequences of online shaming, which was achieved via a mixed-methods research project comprising four studies.
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