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      Political discussions in online oppositional communities in the non-democratic context

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          Abstract

          Taking into account YouTube’s specific role in the Russian media system and the increasing level of political polarization in the country, this study examines the role of incivility in discussions and whether discussions in an anti-government community represent a place for disagreement between pro-opposition and pro-government users. I argue that an online environment helps these sides meet each other rather than creating echo chambers of like-minded users. Moreover, in the quite restrictive Russian context for political deliberation, the incivility of messages plays a role in further involving commenters in discussions. Using the corpus of comments posted in the discussion section of opposition leader Alexei Navalny’s YouTube channel, I exploited class affinity modeling to identify pro-government and pro-opposition stances. Incivility was studied based on Google’s Perspective API toxicity classifier. I found that users avoid extreme forms of incivility when interacting with other commenters, but uncivil comments are more likely to start discussion threads. Furthermore, the level of incivility in comments gets higher over time after a video release. Pro- government sentiments, on the one hand, are associated with a subsequent response from Navalny’s supporters to the out- group criticism and, on the other hand, contribute to the further formation of hubs with a pro-government narrative. This research contributes to the extant literature on affective polarization on social media, shedding light on political discussions within an oppositional community in a non-democracy.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Journal
          CCR
          Computational Communication Research
          Amsterdam University Press (Amsterdam )
          2665-9085
          2665-9085
          2023
          : 5
          : 1
          : 601
          Affiliations
          University of Bologna
          Article
          10.5117/CCR2023.1.7.ZINN
          10.5117/CCR2023.1.7.ZINN
          d34e5443-1a7a-46a7-bdfd-16ac2a61104e
          © The author(s)

          This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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          autocracy,affective polarization,cross-cutting disagreement,Russia,YouTube

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