The Microsociology of Online Deviance (MOD-Lab)

The Microsociology of Online Deviance (MOD-Lab), Department of Sociology, University of Copenhagen, is host to Associate Professor Jakob Demant’s research team and projects in the areas of Digital Deviance and Crime. It boasts a strong record of high-quality research outputs, grant applications, and awards.

MOD-lab grafik. Foto: Colourbox

Many of the MOD-Lab’s projects can be specifically located in the context of recruiting and interviewing hard-to-reach participants, and conducting ethnographic research with stakeholders in illicit, grey-market, and deviant environments, both online and offline. We have projects of both more basic science nature as well as intervention studies.

A number of the studies involve working with populations that may be aggressive to the researchers. This means that not all colleagues involved are mentioned on this page. The names that appear below may not relate to a specific theme or project. Always refer any question regarding our academic contributions or data collection directly to Jakob Demant.

MOD-Lab involves the following projects and initiatives:

 

 

 

The ExOC study is a DFF founded study that aims to explore the creation and sharing of hateful memes online. This will involve a netnographic approach consisting of scraping, data collection, and interviews with youths that spread different forms of hate on a wide range of social media platforms through memes, potentially based on their belonging to multiple and sometimes overlapping deviant subcultures.

The project will strive to develop novel microsociological theories on online interactions and group dynamics.

The project is in its datacollection and and analysis fase. It has collected memes for Telegram, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Discord and Reddit as well as interviewed posters and moderators related to these.

The project is financed by Independent Research Fund Denmark.

PI: Jakob Demant

 

 

 

 

 

 

The project will design an intervention to address the problem behaviour of the online buying and selling of illicit puff bars and related tobacco and nicotine products by answering the following questions:

Where can puff bars be purchased and how? What criminogenic risks do they pose to young people and to wider society? And, importantly, how can these issues be addressed?

The project will thus tackle the identified crisis of the illicit puffbar market by establishing the sociological and economic factors that drive the behaviour of individuals participating in the market for puffbars, specifically considering the rationalisations of both buyers and sellers involved, and identifying the criminogenic risks affecting victims in the local context of tobacco and nicotine products.

More broadly, the project will expose and address the criminogenic dangers presented by overlapping illicit markets, given the opportunities for recruitment of young people and the risk of them entering a cycle of consumption and engagement that may compromise their health and simultaneously encourage them to increase their involvement in criminal activity.

The project expect to deliver results and dissemination in the summer 2024.  

The project is financed by Tryg Foundation. Read more about the project here

PI: Jakob Demant

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Digital Services Act (DSA) promises "a targeted set of uniform, effective, and proportionate mandatory rules… at the Union level," which are described as a "necessary" corrective to "fragmentation" (Preamble (4) DSA 2022). However, during these first years of the DSA’s implementation, questions are already being raised as to how one of the key principles of moderation is going to be implemented and used in relation to the very different national and organizational strengths within and across European nation states. This project addresses these challenges in relation to moderation of online hate, online drug sales, and image-based sexual abuse.

The research project aims to go beyond examining individual states and companies, and instead focuses on the inter-organizational aspects of content moderation, particularly the role of "trusted flaggers" in preventing digital crimes in smaller nations. To achieve this, we combine the method of affordance studies, which provides a specific user perspective from the margins of having a small language, with an organizational legal study of flaggers, law enforcement, and social media companies.

The project is financed by Google Research.

PI: Jakob Demant

 

 

 

 

 

 

This research project aims to understand youth crime from an offender perspective, a dimension that has so far been neglected. While many studies have been conducted on victims' experiences and exposure to various forms of crime, relatively few studies seek to understand the factors that drive perpetrators to offend. Gaining this understanding is crucial to developing effective prevention measures that can address the underlying causes of criminal behaviour. One of the challenges of studying offenders is that traditional survey methods have limited access to uncovering behaviour and motives.

This study will therefore utilise an original, but already proven, digital ethnographic method in combination with 'Ungeprofilundersøgelsen' in a mixed-method design. HUK creates a solid basis for analyses that can contribute to strengthening both national research and the development of prevention efforts in the area.

The project is financed by Crime Prevention Council and Ulla V. Bondensens Foundation.

PI: Jakob Demant

 

 

ManuScrape is a user-friendly software designed to make large-scale netnographic research accessible to everyone. It is developed by MOD-lab and Codecollective as a bespoke tool for data collection within MOD-lab projects. It allows you to collect, enrich and analyze data from platforms like Discord, Facebook, Instagram and any other web-based platform effortlessly. With ManuScrape, you can capture visual interactions, add notes, code, and ensure data privacy with anonymization features to stay GDPR compliant.


The program builds upon research principles of least-intrusive as it captures observations, that is state of art in social science, digital humanities as well in NGO, media and other watch dogs of online behaviour. ManuScrape is also built on open-source principles, meaning its code is freely available for anyone to view, modify, and contribute to. This transparency fosters both trustworthiness of GDPR compliance, but also collaboration and innovation. In this way we aims to ensure ManuScrape remains accessible, reliable, and continuously improving.

You can already start to work with ManuScrape. All key features are working. But if you want to go beyond testing it please refer to Jakob Demant for a Data Controller agreement. We expect to be able to have the program free of change for the next 2024-2025. Access the web version of ManuScrape at manuscrape.org and download the native app at the github repository.

PI: Jakob Demant

 

 

The Journal Club is a monthly get-together of colleagues associated with the MOD-Lab, led by Associate Professor Jakob Demant and involving researchers at all levels from postdocs to PhD students and student assistants working on their Bachelor’s and Master’s theses. We also like to invite Copenhagen based colleges from UCPH and beyond.

The concept is that published journal articles are chosen in advance of each session for all that wish to attend to read and prepare brief contributions for group discussion. The articles or journals will relate to the overarching research areas of the MOD-Lab, including themes such as digital sociological research, netnographic methods, ethics, hate, deviance, online microsociology, criminology, and so on.

The aim is to create an inclusive and supportive platform for fruitful and inspiring conversations and exchanges that may lead to further collaboration including ideas for writing new papers or funding applications together, attending and organising conferences, and beyond.

We focus on journal articles that is published in criminology, sociology and media studies, with the focus on digital aspects of crime and behaviour. Journals as 'New Media & Society', 'Theoretical Criminology', 'Big Data & Society' and 'Deviant Behaviour'. 

 

 

 

Forskere

Name Title Phone E-mail
Jakob Johan Demant Associate Professor +4535321584 E-mail
Keith John Hayward Professor +4535337437 E-mail

Funded by

MOD involves projects that have been funded by Independent Research Fund Denmark, TrygFonden, The Danish Crime Prevention Council, Google Research and Ulla V. Bondesons Foundation

Project: The Microsociology of Online Deviance (MOD)
Project start:  2022

Contact

Jakob Demant
Associalte Professor
Department of Sociology
jd@soc.ku.dk
LinkedIn
Twitter/X: @jakobdemant