Abstract Digital harm in the Global South is expanding rapidly, yet criminological knowledge about it remains constrained by the dominance of Northern data infrastructures and theory-making. This paper introduces the Snapshot of Societymodel, a methodological and epistemic response designed for contexts where canonical surveys, breach registries, and stable reporting systems are limited or absent. Drawing on a three-phase study of Indonesian public reactions to repeated government data breaches—including civil society interviews, a generationally diverse focus group, and a survey of 1081 respondents—we show how seemingly muted public responses reflect data breach fatigue, a patterned form of adaptive resignation shaped by institutional neglect. The Snapshot model demonstrates how Southern researchers can generate grounded, culturally situated insights despite infrastructural constraints, offering an alternative to methodologies that assume Northern forms of data availability. By situating this approach within Southern criminology’s call to reorient knowledge production towards contexts of the South, the paper positions the Snapshot model as both a methodological innovation and an epistemological intervention. It invites cumulative, comparative Snapshot studies across the region to build a truly Southern digital harm scholarship.
Hadi et al. (Tue,) studied this question.