Displacement and Return in the Internet Era : How Social Media Captures Migration Decisions in Northern Syria

Starting in 2011, the Syrian civil war has resulted in the displacement of over 80% of the Syrian population. This paper analyzes how the widespread use of social media has recorded migration considerations for Syrian refugees using social media te...

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Main Authors: Walk, Erin, Garimella, Kiran, Christia, Fotini
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099859204262232856/IDU0a37431c60b4a50431f08ccb0e624be8373c4
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37370
id okr-10986-37370
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-373702022-05-04T05:10:37Z Displacement and Return in the Internet Era : How Social Media Captures Migration Decisions in Northern Syria Walk, Erin Garimella, Kiran Christia, Fotini SOCIAL MEDIA DISCUSSION MONITORING TRACKING SOCIAL MEDIA DISCUSSION REFUGEES AND SOCIAL MEDIA DISPLACED PEOPLE SYRIAN REFUGEES DISPLACEMENT CIVIL WAR SOCIAL MEDIA TOOLS Starting in 2011, the Syrian civil war has resulted in the displacement of over 80% of the Syrian population. This paper analyzes how the widespread use of social media has recorded migration considerations for Syrian refugees using social media text and image data from three popular platforms (Twitter, Telegram, and Facebook). Leveraging survey data as a source of ground truth on the presence of IDPs and returnees, it uses topic modeling and image analysis to find that areas without return have a higher prevalence of violence-related discourse and images while areas with return feature content related to services and the economy. Building on these findings, the paper first uses mixed effects models to show that these results hold pre- and post- return as well as when migration is quantified as monthly population flows. Second, it leverages mediation analysis to find that discussion on social media mediates the relationship between violence and return in months where there are fewer violent events. Monitoring refugee return in war prone areas is a complex task and social media may provide researchers, aid groups, and policymakers with tools for assessing return in areas where survey or other data is unavailable or difficult to obtain. 2022-05-03T18:23:56Z 2022-05-03T18:23:56Z 2022-04 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099859204262232856/IDU0a37431c60b4a50431f08ccb0e624be8373c4 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37370 English Policy Research Working Paper;10024 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research Syrian Arab Republic
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic SOCIAL MEDIA DISCUSSION MONITORING
TRACKING SOCIAL MEDIA DISCUSSION
REFUGEES AND SOCIAL MEDIA
DISPLACED PEOPLE
SYRIAN REFUGEES
DISPLACEMENT
CIVIL WAR
SOCIAL MEDIA TOOLS
spellingShingle SOCIAL MEDIA DISCUSSION MONITORING
TRACKING SOCIAL MEDIA DISCUSSION
REFUGEES AND SOCIAL MEDIA
DISPLACED PEOPLE
SYRIAN REFUGEES
DISPLACEMENT
CIVIL WAR
SOCIAL MEDIA TOOLS
Walk, Erin
Garimella, Kiran
Christia, Fotini
Displacement and Return in the Internet Era : How Social Media Captures Migration Decisions in Northern Syria
geographic_facet Syrian Arab Republic
relation Policy Research Working Paper;10024
description Starting in 2011, the Syrian civil war has resulted in the displacement of over 80% of the Syrian population. This paper analyzes how the widespread use of social media has recorded migration considerations for Syrian refugees using social media text and image data from three popular platforms (Twitter, Telegram, and Facebook). Leveraging survey data as a source of ground truth on the presence of IDPs and returnees, it uses topic modeling and image analysis to find that areas without return have a higher prevalence of violence-related discourse and images while areas with return feature content related to services and the economy. Building on these findings, the paper first uses mixed effects models to show that these results hold pre- and post- return as well as when migration is quantified as monthly population flows. Second, it leverages mediation analysis to find that discussion on social media mediates the relationship between violence and return in months where there are fewer violent events. Monitoring refugee return in war prone areas is a complex task and social media may provide researchers, aid groups, and policymakers with tools for assessing return in areas where survey or other data is unavailable or difficult to obtain.
format Working Paper
author Walk, Erin
Garimella, Kiran
Christia, Fotini
author_facet Walk, Erin
Garimella, Kiran
Christia, Fotini
author_sort Walk, Erin
title Displacement and Return in the Internet Era : How Social Media Captures Migration Decisions in Northern Syria
title_short Displacement and Return in the Internet Era : How Social Media Captures Migration Decisions in Northern Syria
title_full Displacement and Return in the Internet Era : How Social Media Captures Migration Decisions in Northern Syria
title_fullStr Displacement and Return in the Internet Era : How Social Media Captures Migration Decisions in Northern Syria
title_full_unstemmed Displacement and Return in the Internet Era : How Social Media Captures Migration Decisions in Northern Syria
title_sort displacement and return in the internet era : how social media captures migration decisions in northern syria
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2022
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099859204262232856/IDU0a37431c60b4a50431f08ccb0e624be8373c4
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37370
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