Olympics-Women faced 87% of social media abuse in World Athletics Tokyo Games study

Of the 23 athletes who received abuse in the posts identified by the study, 16 were women while 63% of the total abuse was directed at two Black female athletes. The study identified 132 discriminatory posts, while 10% of abuse consisted of transphobic (9%) and homophobic (1%) material.


Reuters | Updated: 25-11-2021 20:27 IST | Created: 25-11-2021 20:27 IST
Olympics-Women faced 87% of social media abuse in World Athletics Tokyo Games study

Women were the target of 87% of the social media abuse that a sample of athletes faced during the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, according to a World Athletics study published on Thursday. The research, carried out in collaboration with data science company Signify Group, found that the abuse included sexist, racist, transphobic and homophobic content, as well as unfounded doping accusations.

The study included a sample of 161 Twitter handles of current and former athletes (81 women, 80 men) involved in the Tokyo Games, from a list of 200 athletes selected by World Athletics. Of the 23 athletes who received abuse in the posts identified by the study, 16 were women while 63% of the total abuse was directed at two Black female athletes.

The study identified 132 discriminatory posts, while 10% of abuse consisted of transphobic (9%) and homophobic (1%) material. "When we published our Safeguarding Policy earlier this month, I said athletics clubs, schools and community sports environments should be safe and happy places for those in our sport," said World Athletics President Sebastian Coe.

"This research is disturbing in so many ways but what strikes me the most is that the abuse is targeted at individuals who are celebrating and sharing their performances and talent as a way to inspire and motivate people." World Athletics added that it would be conducting further research in this area to introduce an online abuse framework for its own social media channels in order to create a safer environment for athletes.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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