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Gender differences in the climate change communication on Twitter

Kim Holmberg Iina Hellsten

Gender differences in the climate change communication on Twitter

Kim Holmberg Iina Hellsten
Katso/Avaa
ir_preprint.pdf (419.8Kb)
Lataukset: 

Emerald
doi:10.1108/IntR-07-2014-0179
URI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/IntR-07-2014-0179
Näytä kaikki kuvailutiedot
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042714761
Tiivistelmä




Purpose



 



We present a study about gender differences in the climate change communication on Twitter and in the use of affordances on Twitter.








Design/methodology/approach



 



Our dataset consists of about 250,000 tweets and retweets for which the authors’ gender was identified. While content of tweets and hashtags used were analyzed for common topics and specific contexts, the usernames that were proportionately more frequently mentioned by either male or female tweeters were coded 1) according to the usernames’ stance in the climate change debate into convinced (that climate change is caused by humans), sceptics, neutrals and unclear groups, and 2) according to the type or role of the user account (e.g. campaign, organization, private person).








Findings



 



The results indicate that overall male and female tweeters use very similar language in their tweets, but clear differences were observed in the use of hashtags and usernames, with female tweeters mentioning significantly more campaigns and organizations with a convinced attitude towards anthropogenic impact on climate change, while male tweeters mention significantly more private persons and usernames with a sceptical stance. The differences were even greater when retweets and duplicate tweets by the same author were removed from the data, indicating how retweeting can significantly influence the results.








Practical implications



 



On a theoretical level our results increase our understanding for how women and men view and engage with climate change. This has practical implications for organizations interested in developing communication strategies for reaching and engaging female and male audiences on Twitter. While female tweeters can be targeted via local campaigns and news media, male tweeters seem to follow more political and scientific information. The results from the present research also showed that more research about the meaning of retweeting is needed, as we have shown how retweets can have a significant impact on the results.








Originality/value



 



Our findings contribute towards increased understanding of both gender differences in the climate change debate and in social media use in general. Beyond that this research showed how retweeting may have a significant impact on research where tweets are used as a data source.




 

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