Affiliation:
1. Royal Roads University, Canada
2. McMaster University, Canada
3. Western University, Canada
Abstract
Although scholars increasingly use online platforms for public, digital, and networked scholarship, the research examining their experiences of harassment and abuse online is scant. In this study, we interviewed 14 women scholars who experienced online harassment in order to understand how they coped with this phenomenon. We found that scholars engaged in reactive, anticipatory, preventive, and proactive coping strategies. In particular, scholars engaged in strategies aimed at self-protection and resistance, while often responding to harassment by acceptance and self-blame. These findings have important implications for practice and research, including practical recommendations for personal, institutional, and platform responses to harassment, as well as scholarly recommendations for future research into scholars’ experiences of harassment.
Funder
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Communication
Cited by
82 articles.
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