Comments under Australian media stories negative about Muslims are 'Petri dishes' for racism

Negative opinion pieces about Muslim people published in mainstream newspapers foster racism among commenters, new analysis shows.

A member of the Muslim community outside the Auburn Gallipoli Mosque in Auburn, Sydney.

All Together Now has warned that Australian media stories painting Muslims in a negative light give momentum to racism. Source: AAP

The comments sections underneath opinion pieces on Australian media websites are "Petri dishes" where racism grows and flourishes, new analysis suggests.

Islamophobic beliefs are normalised in the comments on opinion pieces expressing negative views on Muslim people as people with similar views embolden each other, the research from anti-racism organisation All Together Now suggests.

Though these comments are often expressed relatively politely, they still convey racist ideas.

"The impact race-related media pieces have on people is tangible and our report shows the dangerously polarising effect they can have," All Together Now managing director Priscilla Brice said.
All Together Now analysed more than 4,500 user comments on 29 articles that contained negative opinions about Muslim Australians. It examined the content and tone of the comments.

Readers tended to discuss racist ideas, building on the content of the original article as well as the other comments.

In one example, an opinion piece about burqas and niqabs led to commenters making insulting comments about Muslim women's attire.

One reader likened the burqa to a letterbox. Then others added comments that became more extreme and overtly racist.
This is evidence that the comment sections give readers the opportunity to openly discuss "contemptible" ideas that are rejected by the broad public, the report "Politely Racist" concludes.

But, perhaps to avoid their comments being deleted by moderators, the vast majority are phrased in relatively polite language.

"The fundamental issue here is a lack of complexity when discussing race and racism," Ms Brice said.

"Evidence shows that people who are exposed to nuanced media content are less likely to become polarised in their beliefs. Good journalists and commentators need to cultivate better conversations by abandoning binary, simplistic presentations of complex topics such as race, and by embracing nuance."

She called on news organisation to cultivate an anti-racist culture in their workplaces and increase their staffers' cultural diversity.
All Together Now had previously collected and analysed 724 opinion pieces and TV segments in mainstream media relating to race from 2018 to 2020.

The research found that 78 per cent of pieces about Muslim people were negative.

The majority were published by News Corp-owned newspapers. Other media outlets barely discussed Muslim Australians.


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2 min read
Published 20 May 2021 10:21am
Updated 20 May 2021 10:46am
Source: AAP, SBS



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