To control online misinformation, we need real-world solutions
The big lie was planned well in advance. Before he became president in 2016, Donald Trump was saying that U.S. elections were rigged. In 2020, months before voting began, Trump said the only way he’d lose would be because of voter fraud. After Election Day, he claimed it over and over again, irregularities and illegalities that simply never happened. Fonte: Poynter. Leia todo o texto aqui.
Impeachment por quê? As respostas de jornais brasileiros sobre o caso Dilma Rousseff
Is there a standard research career? The unintended consequences of task specialisation in science
Researchers collaborate by specialising in specific tasks. However, research evaluation systems tend to reward some research profiles over others. From the vantage point of research bureaucracy, research careers are envisioned as homogeneous pathways in which individuals take a series of steps to advance. In each step, researchers must comply with certain criteria, usually so embedded into expectations of scientists that many countries and…
O jornalismo como processo social: uma discussão ancorada no artigo “Gatekeeping in Action: Editorial Conferences and Assessments of Newsworthiness”
When writing news requires a distance from neutrality to “tell it like it is”
One of my favorite songs by the great Aaron Neville is “Tell It Like It Is.” That could be the anthem of the moment for journalists, along with the lyrics, “Don’t be afraid, let your conscience be your guide.” Fonte: NiemanLab. Leia todo o texto aqui.