Princeton University Press
Tamar Mitts
Associate Professor of International and Public Affairs
Personal Details
Tamar Mitts is an Associate Professor of International and Public Affairs and a member of the Data Science Institute, the Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies and the Political Science Department at Columbia University. Her research addresses emerging challenges at the intersection of technology and conflict.
Professor Mitts’s work focuses on several broad questions: (a) What role does social media play during conflict and civil war? (b) How do violent and nonviolent movements use the internet to advance their cause? and (c) In what ways can media be manipulated to shape public opinion? Mitts’s research draws on innovative data collection techniques and creative research designs that leverage the wealth of information available in digital media platforms. Her articles have been published in leading journals, including the American Political Science Review, International Organization, the Journal of Politics, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, and the Journal of Economic Perspectives, among other outlets. Her research has been cited in the Washington Post, Boston Globe, Fortune Magazine, Vox, War on the Rocks, and Foreign Policy.
Her new book, Safe Havens for Hate: The Challenge of Moderating Online Extremism (Princeton University Press, published in 2025), offers a novel account of how content moderation shapes the activity of harmful content producers, by providing a deep dive into networks of extremist organizations on a wide range of social media platforms. Drawing on rich data on the activity of over a hundred militant and hate organizations, the book shows that different moderation standards across platforms create “safe havens” that allow these actors to organize, launch campaigns, and mobilize supporters.
Mitts holds an M.A., M.Phil., and Ph.D. in political science from Columbia University and a B.A. in politics from New York University.
Honors and Awards
- Best Paper Award in the Conflict Processes Section, American Political Science Association. 2023.
- Patricia Weitsman Award for outstanding graduate student paper, International Security Studies Section (ISSS) of the International Studies Association (ISA). 2018.
Research And Publications
The Politics of Allyship: Multiethnic Coalitions and Nonviolent Resistance
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 121, no. 19
Cross-Platform Reactions to the Post-January 6 Deplatforming
Journal of Quantitative Description: Digital Media 3
How the Ultra-Rich Use Media Ownership as a Political Investment
The Journal of Politics 84, no. 4: 1913-1931
Political Coalitions and Social Media: Evidence from Pakistan
Perspectives on Politics: 1-20
In The Media
Author of Safe Havens for Hate, Tamar Mitts, explores how extremist rhetoric thrives online and why content moderation doesn’t effectively tackle it by analyzing militant groups’ digital resilience and platform migration tactics.
Drawing on data from militant and hate organizations around the world, SIPA Associate Professor Tamar Mitts shows how differing moderation standards across platforms create safe havens that allow these actors to organize, launch campaigns, and mobilize supporters.
"The inconsistency [in content moderation] is really powerful for actors who wish to promote extremism on social media. That allows them to find people who may be attracted to the ideologies and recruit them on less moderated spaces," said SIPA's Tamar Mitts on CNN.
Attempts to moderate online hate might actually be creating more harmful content. Tamar Mitts is a professor of international and public affairs at Columbia University, where she is a faculty member at the Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies, the Institute of Global Politics, and the Data Science Institute.
In a new book, Mitts reveals how extremist groups strategically navigate across different platforms to thrive despite content moderation efforts.