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Content
2023, Volume 11, Issue 3
2023, Volume 11, Issue 2
- 1-4 (Dis)Information Literacy: A Democratic Right and Duty of All Citizens
by José Antonio Muñiz-Velázquez
- 5-14 The (Un)Intended Consequences of Emphasizing the Threats of Mis- and Disinformation
by Michael Hameleers
- 15-29 An Overview of the Fake News Phenomenon: From Untruth-Driven to Post-Truth-Driven Approaches
by Raúl Rodríguez-Ferrándiz
- 30-41 Exploring European Citizens’ Resilience to Misinformation: Media Legitimacy and Media Trust as Predictive Variables
by Carlos Rodríguez-Pérez & María José Canel
- 42-52 Vulnerability to Disinformation in Relation to Political Affiliation in North Macedonia
by Edlira Palloshi Disha & Albulena Halili & Agron Rustemi
- 53-63 Teaching Journalism Literacy in Schools: The Role of Media Companies as Media Educators in Germany
by Michael Sengl & Elfi Heinke
- 64-75 Accessing to a “Truer Truth”: Conspiracy and Figurative Reasoning From Covid-19 to the Russia–Ukraine War
by Bianca Terracciano
- 76-87 A Systematic Literature Review of the Phenomenon of Disinformation and Misinformation
by Marta Pérez-Escolar & Darren Lilleker & Alejandro Tapia-Frade
- 88-100 Combating Disinformation or Reinforcing Cognitive Bias: Effect of Weibo Poster’s Location Disclosure
by Chang Luo & Juan Liu & Tianjiao Yang & Jinghong Xu
- 101-108 Pre-Truth: Fake News, Semiological Guerrilla Warfare, and Some Other Media and Communication “Revolutions”
by Claudio Paolucci
- 109-112 New Frontiers for Political Communication in Times of Spectacularization
by Salvador Gómez-García & Rocío Zamora & Salomé Berrocal
- 113-126 Partisanship, Ideology, and Selective Exposure: A Longitudinal Analysis of Media Consumption in Spain (2008–2019)
by María Luisa Humanes & Lidia Valera-Ordaz
- 127-136 Experiencing Political Advertising Through Social Media Logic: A Qualitative Inquiry
by Martin Echeverría
- 137-147 Technopopulism and Politainment in Brazil: Bolsonaro Government’s Weekly YouTube Broadcasts
by Karina Di Nubila & Carlos A. Ballesteros-Herencia & Dunia Etura & Virginia Martín-Jiménez
- 148-162 The Spectacle of “Patriotic Violence” in Romania: Populist Leader George Simion’s Mediated Performance
by Teodora-Elena Grapă & Andreea-Alina Mogoș
- 163-175 Politainment on Twitter: Engagement in the Spanish Legislative Elections of April 2019
by Salomé Berrocal-Gonzalo & Patricia Zamora-Martínez & Ana González-Neira
- 176-187 Journalism in Democracy: A Discourse Analysis of Twitter Posts on the Ferrerasgate Scandal
by Itziar Reguero-Sanz & Pablo Berdón-Prieto & Jacobo Herrero-Izquierdo
- 188-202 Selfies and Speeches of a President at War: Volodymyr Zelensky’s Strategy of Spectacularization on Instagram
by Maite Plazas-Olmedo & Pablo López-Rabadán
- 203-217 TikTok and Political Communication: The Latest Frontier of Politainment? A Case Study
by Laura Cervi & Santiago Tejedor & Fernando García Blesa
- 218-231 Securing the Youth Vote: A Comparative Analysis of Digital Persuasion on TikTok Among Political Actors
by Rocío Zamora-Medina & Andrius Suminas & Shahira S. Fahmy
- 232-240 Populist Right Parties on TikTok: Spectacularization, Personalization, and Hate Speech
by Juan Manuel González-Aguilar & Francisco Segado-Boj & Mykola Makhortykh
- 241-254 Music as Soft Power: The Electoral Use of Spotify
by Raquel Quevedo-Redondo & Marta Rebolledo & Nuria Navarro-Sierra
- 255-265 Spanish-Portuguese Serial Fiction as a Politainment Tool: Representations of Politics on Iberian Television
by Mar Chicharro-Merayo & Fátima Gil-Gascón & Carla Baptista
- 266-277 Digital Games as Persuasion Spaces for Political Marketing: Joe Biden’s Campaign in Fortnite
by Jenniffer Soto de la Cruz & Teresa de la Hera & Sara Cortés Gómez & Pilar Lacasa
- 278-290 Games as Political Actors in Digital Journalism
by Salvador Gómez-García & Teresa de la Hera
- 291-295 Datafied Societies: Digital Infrastructures, Data Power, and Regulations
by Raul Ferrer-Conill & Helle Sjøvaag & Ragnhild Kr. Olsen
- 296-306 Digital Platforms and Infrastructure in the Realm of Culture
by David Hesmondhalgh & Raquel Campos Valverde & D. Bondy Valdovinos Kaye & Zhongwei Li
- 307-318 The Infrastructure of News: Negotiating Infrastructural Capture and Autonomy in Data-Driven News Distribution
by Lisa Merete Kristensen & Jannie Møller Hartley
- 319-329 Follow the Data! A Strategy for Tracing Infrastructural Power
by Sofie Flensburg & Signe Sophus Lai
- 330-343 Google News Initiative’s Influence on Technological Media Innovation in Africa and the Middle East
by Mathias-Felipe de-Lima-Santos & Allen Munoriyarwa & Adeola Abdulateef Elega & Charis Papaevangelou
- 344-354 “I Think Quality is More Important Than a Lot of Data” in Cities Datafication
by Carl Chineme Okafor
- 355-366 Wellbeing Amid Digital Risks: Implications of Digital Risks, Threats, and Scams on Users’ Wellbeing
by Bindiya Dutt
- 367-378 Post-Publication Gatekeeping Factors and Practices: Data, Platforms, and Regulations in News Work
by Margareta Salonen & Veera Ehrlén & Minna Koivula & Karoliina Talvitie-Lamberg
- 379-391 Platforms and Exposure Diversity: Towards a Framework to Assess Policies to Promote Exposure Diversity
by Heritiana Ranaivoson & Nino Domazetovikj
- 392-405 Media Concentration Law: Gaps and Promises in the Digital Age
by Theresa Josephine Seipp
- 406-409 The Fact of Content Moderation; Or, Let’s Not Solve the Platforms’ Problems for Them
by Tarleton Gillespie
2023, Volume 11, Issue 1
- 1-5 Referendum Campaigns in the Digital Age: Towards (More) Comparative Analyses in Hybrid Media Systems
by Linards Udris & Mark Eisenegger
- 6-18 Mobile News Consumption and Its Relation to Young Adults’ Knowledge About and Participation in Referendums
by Daniel Vogler & Morley Weston & Quirin Ryffel & Adrian Rauchfleisch & Pascal Jürgens & Mark Eisenegger & Lisa Schwaiger & Urs Christen
- 19-30 Googling Referendum Campaigns: Analyzing Online Search Patterns Regarding Swiss Direct-Democratic Votes
by Sina Blassnig & Eliza Mitova & Nico Pfiffner & Michael V. Reiss
- 31-42 Do Intensive Public Debates on Direct-Democratic Ballots Narrow the Gender Gap in Social Media Use?
by Laurent Bernhard & Daniel Kübler
- 43-55 Level Playing Field or Politics as Usual? Equalization–Normalization in Direct Democratic Online Campaigns
by Michaela Fischer & Fabrizio Gilardi
- 56-68 Referendum Campaigns in Hybrid Media Systems: Insights From the New Zealand Cannabis Legalisation Referendum
by Marta Rychert & Chris Wilkins
- 69-80 Beyond Brexit? Public Participation in Decision-Making on Campaign Data During and After Referendum Campaigns
by Julia Rone
- 81-85 Does Social Media Use Matter? A Case Study of the 2018 Irish Abortion Referendum
by Theresa Reidy & Jane Suiter
- 86-90 Countering or Reinforcing (Gendered) Inequalities? Ramifications of the Covid-19 Pandemic in and Through Media
by Margreth Lünenborg & Wolfgang Reißmann & Miriam Siemon
- 91-101 All’s Fair in Pandemic and War? A Gendered Analysis of Australian Coverage of Covid-19
by Blair Williams & Brent Greer
- 102-113 The Frontlines and Margins: Gendered Care and Covid-19 in the Indian Media
by Usha Raman & Sumana Kasturi
- 114-124 8M Demonstrations, the Spanish Far Right, and the Pandemic in a Hybrid Media System
by Aurora Labio-Bernal & Laura Manzano-Zambruno
- 125-138 Negotiating Care Work: Gendered Network Structures of Pandemic Care Discourses on Twitter in Germany
by Miriam Siemon & Wolfgang Reißmann
- 139-149 Reframing Leadership: Jacinda Ardern’s Response to the Covid-19 Pandemic
by Andreea Voina & Mihnea S. Stoica
- 150-162 Cartographies of Resistance: Counter-Data Mapping as the New Frontier of Digital Media Activism
by Sandra Jeppesen & Paola Sartoretto
- 163-172 Representing Life and Death in Care Institutions: Between Invisible Victims and Suffering Old Women
by Shari Adlung & Annabella Backes
- 173-183 Maternal Health Information Disparities Amid Covid-19: Comparing Urban and Rural Expectant Mothers in Ghana
by Sahar Khamis & Delight Jessica Agboada
- 184-196 Career, Covid-19, and Care: (Gendered) Impacts of the Pandemic on the Work of Communication Scholars
by Kathrin Friederike Müller & Corinna Peil & Franzisca Weder
- 197-211 Knowledge Gap Hypothesis and Pandemics: Covid-19 Knowledge, Communication Inequality, and Media Literacy in Lebanon
by Jad Melki
- 212-216 Editorial: Science Communication in the Digital Age—New Actors, Environments, and Practices
by Julia Metag & Florian Wintterlin & Kira Klinger
- 217-227 “You Can Do Better Than That!”: Tweeting Scientists Addressing Politics on Climate Change and Covid-19
by Kaija Biermann & Nicola Peters & Monika Taddicken
- 228-239 Maximizing Science Outreach on Facebook: An Analysis of Scientists’ Communication Strategies in Taiwan
by Adrian Rauchfleisch & Jo-Ju Kao & Tzu-Hsuan Tseng & Chia-Tzu Ho & Lu-Yi Li
- 240-251 Women Scientists on TikTok: New Opportunities to Become Visible and Challenge Gender Stereotypes
by Brigitte Huber & Luis Quesada Baena
- 252-236 Content Analysis From a Gender Perspective of Comments Received by Spanish Science YouTubers
by Belén Cambronero-Saiz & Carmen Cristófol-Rodríguez & Jesús Segarra-Saavedra
- 264-277 Higher Education Institutions on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter: Comparing Swiss Universities’ Social Media Communication
by Isabel Sörensen & Silke Fürst & Daniel Vogler & Mike S. Schäfer
- 278-292 Between Calls for Action and Narratives of Denial: Climate Change Attention Structures on Twitter
by Hendrik Meyer & Amelia Katelin Peach & Lars Guenther & Hadas Emma Kedar & Michael Brüggemann
- 293-305 The Multilingual Twitter Discourse on Vaccination in Germany During the Covid-19 Pandemic
by Hannah Schmid-Petri & Moritz Bürger & Stephan Schlögl & Mara Schwind & Jelena Mitrović & Ramona Kühn
- 306-322 How Do Multiple Actors Conduct Science Communication About Omicron on Weibo: A Mixed-Method Study
by Jinghong Xu & Difan Guo & Jing Xu & Chang Luo
- 323-334 Covid-19 Research in Alternative News Media: Evidencing and Counterevidencing Practices
by Markus Schug & Helena Bilandzic & Susanne Kinnebrock
- 335-248 Scientific Information Literacy: Adaption of Concepts and an Investigation Into the Chinese Public
by Han Wang & Lina Li & Jing Wu & Hao Gao
- 349-360 Meet Bob and Offset Your Flight: Optimising Explainer Videos to Promote Voluntary Carbon Offsetting
by Anna Schorn & Werner Wirth
- 361-373 How Politicians’ Attacks on Science Communication Influence Public Perceptions of Journalists and Scientists
by Jana Laura Egelhofer
2022, Volume 10, Issue 4
- 1-4 Contentious Politics in a Digital World: Studies on Social Activism, Protest, and Polarization
by Homero Gil de Zúñiga & Isabel Inguanzo & Alberto Ardèvol-Abreu
- 5-17 States vs. Social Movements: Protests and State Repression in Asia
by Josephine Lukito & Zhe Cui & An Hu & Taeyoung Lee & Joao V. S. Ozawa
- 18-29 Another Violent Protest? New Perspectives to Understand Protest Coverage
by Valentina Proust & Magdalena Saldaña
- 30-41 Conspiracy Beliefs, Misinformation, Social Media Platforms, and Protest Participation
by Shelley Boulianne & Sangwon Lee
- 42-55 Far-Right Digital Activism in Polarized Contexts: A Comparative Analysis of Engagement in Hashtag Wars
by Viktor Chagas & Rodrigo Carreiro & Nina Santos & Guilherme Popolin
- 56-65 Polarization of Deliberative and Participatory Activists on Social Media
by Azi Lev-On
- 66-76 Social Media and Contentious Action: The Use and Users of QQ Groups in China
by Zixue Tai
- 77-93 WhatsApp, Polarization, and Non-Conventional Political Participation: Chile and Colombia Before the Social Outbursts of 2019
by Andrés Scherman & Nicolle Etchegaray & Magdalena Browne & Diego Mazorra & Hernando Rojas
- 94-104 Examining the Role of Online Uncivil Discussion and Ideological Extremity on Illegal Protest
by Bingbing Zhang & Isabel Inguanzo & Homero Gil de Zúñiga
- 105-108 Editorial: Populism in and Through Online Communities
by Ashley Hinck
- 109-117 “Don’t Fauci My Florida:” Anti-Fauci Memes as Digital Anti-Intellectualism
by Andrew Zolides
- 118-128 The Spectre of Populist Leadership: QAnon, Emergent Formations, and Digital Community
by Rob Cover & Jay Daniel Thompson & Ashleigh Haw
- 129-140 Populist Disinformation: Are Citizens With Populist Attitudes Affected Most by Radical Right-Wing Disinformation?
by Michael Hameleers
- 141-154 How Right-Wing Populist Comments Affect Online Deliberation on News Media Facebook Pages
by Daniel Thiele & Tjaša Turnšek
- 155-169 Far-Right Populism Online: Did VOX’s Community Reproduce the Party’s Discourse During the April 2019 Campaign?
by Arantxa Capdevila & Carlota M. Moragas-Fernández & Josep Maria Grau Masot
- 170-179 What “Real” Women Want: Alt-Right Femininity Vlogs as an Anti-Feminist Populist Aesthetic
by Megan L. Zahay
- 180-190 Politicisation of the Domestic: Populist Narratives About Covid-19 Among Influencers
by Marie Heřmanová
- 191-201 Points of Contact Between Activism, Populism, and Fandom on Social Media
by Sarah Riddick
- 202-212 Dropkick Murphys vs. Scott Walker: Unpacking Populist Ideological Discourse in Digital Space
by Connor D. Wilcox
- 213-223 Bread and Plots: Conspiracy Theories and the Rhetorical Style of Political Influencer Communities on YouTube
by Christina Wurst
- 224-235 Caring Ecologies of the New Right and Left: Populist Performances of Care During the Pandemic
by Sara García Santamaría
- 236-247 Manufacturing Populism: Digitally Amplified Vernacular Authority
by Robert Glenn Howard
- 248-255 Editorial: Inclusive Media Literacy Education for Diverse Societies
by Çiğdem Bozdağ & Annamária Neag & Koen Leurs
- 256-266 Children’s News Media as a Space for Learning About Difference
by Camilla Haavisto & Avanti Chajed & Rasmus Kyllönen
- 267-276 Beyond Solutionism: Differently Motivating Media Literacy
by Julian McDougall & Isabella Rega
- 277-288 Intergenerational Perspectives on Media and Fake News During Covid-19: Results From Online Intergenerational Focus Groups
by Ana Filipa Oliveira & Maria José Brites & Carla Cerqueira
- 289-293 Using Comics as a Media Literacy Tool for Marginalised Groups: The Case of Athens Comics Library
by Lida Tsene
- 294-304 Storytelling as Media Literacy and Intercultural Dialogue in Post-Colonial Societies
by Maria Teresa Cruz & Madalena Miranda
- 305-316 Inclusive Media Education in the Diverse Classroom: A Participatory Action Research in Germany
by Çiğdem Bozdağ
- 317-327 Aspiring to Dutchness: Media Literacy, Integration, and Communication with Eritrean Status Holders
by Rosanne van Kommer & Joke Hermes
- 328-337 Taking a Dialogical Approach to Guiding Gaming Practices in a Non-Family Context
by Gilda Seddighi
- 338-346 Transforming Disinformation on Minorities Into a Pedagogical Resource: Towards a Critical Intercultural News Literacy
by Sílvia Melo-Pfeifer & Helena Dedecek Gertz
- 347-356 Joining and Gaining Knowledge From Digital Literacy Courses: How Perceptions of Internet and Technology Outweigh Socio-Demographic Factors
by Azi Lev-On & Hama Abu-Kishk & Nili Steinfeld
- 357-368 When Everyone Wins: Dialogue, Play, and Black History for Critical Games Education
by Rebecca Rouse & Amy Corron Youmans
- 369-381 Digital Rights, Institutionalised Youths, and Contexts of Inequalities
by Maria José Brites & Teresa Sofia Castro
- 382-390 Beyond Digital Literacy in Australian Prisons: Theorizing “Network Literacy,” Intersectionality, and Female Incarcerated Students
by Susan Hopkins
- 391-399 Including the Experiences of Children and Youth in Media Education
by Markéta Supa & Lucie Römer & Vojtěch Hodboď
- 400-410 Mapping the Inclusion of Children and Youth With Disabilities in Media Literacy Research
by Carla Sousa & Conceição Costa
2022, Volume 10, Issue 3
2022, Volume 10, Issue 2
2022, Volume 10, Issue 1