Online and Abused: Girls of Color Facing Racialized Sexual Harassment

This study, based on 841 surveys with 18-to-19-year-old teenage girls who live, work, or attend school in the Greater Baltimore area, investigated their social media use and the kind of harassment they are subjected to on different platforms. Racialized sexual harassment was rampant, with girls of c...

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Main Authors: Pallavi Guha, Paromita Pain
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2024-11-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051241302153
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author Pallavi Guha
Paromita Pain
author_facet Pallavi Guha
Paromita Pain
author_sort Pallavi Guha
collection DOAJ
description This study, based on 841 surveys with 18-to-19-year-old teenage girls who live, work, or attend school in the Greater Baltimore area, investigated their social media use and the kind of harassment they are subjected to on different platforms. Racialized sexual harassment was rampant, with girls of color being inundated with requests for nudes and sexual comments, especially on Facebook. Participants said that they faced harassment on Instagram irrespective of race, which, as prior studies have shown, has a distinct bias against users of color. Harassment toward girls of color promoted harmful racial stereotypes. American Indians were also deeply impacted. Unrelenting online harassment made participants feel uncomfortable and uneasy (45%), racially discriminated against (40%), and hated (12%) on platforms they chose to socialize and seek information of interest on.
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publishDate 2024-11-01
publisher SAGE Publishing
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series Social Media + Society
spelling doaj-art-8c12c49e6cc44fc8a9158adb086c40ab2024-11-29T07:03:29ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512024-11-011010.1177/20563051241302153Online and Abused: Girls of Color Facing Racialized Sexual HarassmentPallavi Guha0Paromita Pain1Towson University, USAUniversity of Nevada, Reno, USAThis study, based on 841 surveys with 18-to-19-year-old teenage girls who live, work, or attend school in the Greater Baltimore area, investigated their social media use and the kind of harassment they are subjected to on different platforms. Racialized sexual harassment was rampant, with girls of color being inundated with requests for nudes and sexual comments, especially on Facebook. Participants said that they faced harassment on Instagram irrespective of race, which, as prior studies have shown, has a distinct bias against users of color. Harassment toward girls of color promoted harmful racial stereotypes. American Indians were also deeply impacted. Unrelenting online harassment made participants feel uncomfortable and uneasy (45%), racially discriminated against (40%), and hated (12%) on platforms they chose to socialize and seek information of interest on.https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051241302153
spellingShingle Pallavi Guha
Paromita Pain
Online and Abused: Girls of Color Facing Racialized Sexual Harassment
Social Media + Society
title Online and Abused: Girls of Color Facing Racialized Sexual Harassment
title_full Online and Abused: Girls of Color Facing Racialized Sexual Harassment
title_fullStr Online and Abused: Girls of Color Facing Racialized Sexual Harassment
title_full_unstemmed Online and Abused: Girls of Color Facing Racialized Sexual Harassment
title_short Online and Abused: Girls of Color Facing Racialized Sexual Harassment
title_sort online and abused girls of color facing racialized sexual harassment
url https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051241302153
work_keys_str_mv AT pallaviguha onlineandabusedgirlsofcolorfacingracializedsexualharassment
AT paromitapain onlineandabusedgirlsofcolorfacingracializedsexualharassment