This Monday, the project team of the Misogyny 2.0 research project had the honour of hosting a workshop with their partners Kankshi Agarwal (NETRI Foundation, India) and Suki Capobianco (Apolitical Foundation, Germany) at the Munich School for Politics and Public Policy at TUM.
The focus of the meeting was to present and discuss the results of the quantitative and qualitative data collection of the Indian context.
Online violence against politically active people remains a key threat to democracy. The groups therefore call for more research and activism on this issue.
This project is kindly funded by the Bavarian Research Institute for Digital Transformation.