First-of-its-kind study analyzes digital mourning practices of gang-affiliated youth

A study led by Desmond Patton utilizes social work, communications, and data science to explore how gang-affiliated Black youth use Twitter content, photos, and emojis to memorialize the deceased and navigate feelings of grief and loss.

A new paper co-written by Desmond Upton Patton, a professor at Penn’s School of Social Policy & Practice (SP2) and Penn’s Annenberg School for Communication, explores the role of images in the online grieving practices of gang-affiliated Black youth.

Desmond Patton.
Desmond Patton is the Brian and Randi Schwartz University Professor,with joint appointments in the School of Social Policy & Practice and the Annenberg School for Communication along with a secondary appointment in the department of psychiatry in the Perelman School of Medicine. (Image: Eric Sucar)

The study is believed to be the first of its kind and aims to add to a limited body of scholarship. Patton, a pioneer in the interdisciplinary fusion of social work, communications, and data science, coauthored the new study as senior author.

Due to his groundbreaking body of research, Patton was one of 13 participants invited to the White House last week for a listening session convened by the Biden-Harris Administration’s Task Force on Kids Online Health and Safety.

The new paper, published in New Media & Society, explores how gang-affiliated Black youth use Twitter content, photos, and emojis—referred to as multimodal tweets—to memorialize the deceased and navigate feelings of grief and loss. “Black grief is not well-understood, both in offline and online spaces,” the authors write.

The paper’s coauthors include researchers at Columbia University, led by SAFElab doctoral student Nathan Aguilar, as well as Aviv Landau, co-director of SAFElab and research assistant professor at SP2; and Shana Kleiner, lab manager of SAFELab. A research initiative at SP2 and Annenberg, SAFELab is focused on examining the ways in which youth of color navigate violence, grief, and joy online and offline.

The researchers analyzed a dataset of Twitter conversations among youth residing in Chicago neighborhoods characterized by high levels of gang activity, taking a critical lens toward the impact of racial segregation and grief on the offline experiences of this population.

Their findings reveal that multimodal tweets are intrinsically linked with the grieving process of gang-affiliated Black youth.

This story is by Carson Easterly. Read more at SP2 News.