Õ¬Äе¼º½

A fingertip pushes on the Facebook App on a mobile phone screen.
Õ¬Äе¼º½ research has found online reporting of minor crime can unjustly stigmatise a neighbourhood, and affect people's use of public spaces offline. Image: Adobe
14 September 2022

Researchers from Õ¬Äе¼º½ have found the reporting of minor crimes on community social media pages can make residents feel their neighbourhood is less safe, even when statistics show actual crime is low.

from Õ¬Äе¼º½’s and her research team surveyed a cross-section of Brisbane residents about their perceptions of crime in their suburb and compared it with crime data.

As part of Õ¬Äе¼º½’s Research and Innovation Week, Dr Zahnow last night received a Õ¬Äе¼º½ Foundation Research Excellence Award to help continue her work in this area.

“So far what we’ve found is people will believe posts on their community Facebook page that suggest their area is criminogenic or unsafe,” said Dr Zahnow.

“But it’s often not borne out by the facts.

“The chatter on these pages can create an impression of criminal or deviant behaviours that really are reports of minor incidents.”

Dr Zahnow said the type of behaviours commonly mentioned are people loitering, littering, tipping over rubbish bins and not picking up dog waste.

“More and more, social norms and the definitions of crime or disorder are starting to be constructed online,” she said.  

“And very safe places end up being unjustly stigmatised.”

A white woman stands outdoors with trees and a bus behind her. She has her hair pulled back and is smiling.

Dr Zahnow said other common community online posts were calls to ‘watch out’ for a particular group of people.

“It can be passively racist, insinuating certain people are linked to crime when all they might be doing is walking down a street,” she said.

“The same thing happens with posts about young people, or someone wearing a cap or hoodie.

“It means we become more and more suspicious and intolerant of particular groups in society and this can affect people’s real-life interactions with them.”

Dr Zahnow said the perception of a suburb’s ‘safeness’ could impact how often people used public spaces.

“We’ve found particularly some older people, who already have a heightened sense of crime despite statistically being low risk, are not going out and using public spaces,” she said.

“This has a huge impact and can lead to higher levels of loneliness, mental illness and issues with their physical health.”

Dr Zahnow is now looking to expand her research, after receiving a Õ¬Äе¼º½ Foundation Research Excellence Award, which recognises excellence and the promise of future success in research for Õ¬Äе¼º½’s early to mid-career researchers.

“The next stage of this project is to take data on crime discourse from the community Facebook page for every suburb across Queensland over one week,” she said.

“I’m interested to see if people posting about these incidents on Facebook are also reporting them and taking action offline.

“If they’re intervening offline that’s probably good for crime prevention and community cohesion, but if they’re just venting online and creating a sense of panic then there’s no benefit for the community.

“The public discourse that we allow on mediums like Facebook really does influence the way people start to think and behave.”

Click here for the full list of this year’s Õ¬Äе¼º½ Foundation Research Excellence Award winners. 

Above left: Dr Renee Zahnow.

Media: Dr Renee Zahnow, r.zahnow@uq.edu.au, +61 7 336 52167; or communications@uq.edu.au, +61 429 056139.