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Fact-checking the Covid-19 Infodemic in Sub-Saharan Africa
Journal article   Open access

Fact-checking the Covid-19 Infodemic in Sub-Saharan Africa

Melissa Tully and Jane B Singer
African journalism studies, Vol.44(2), pp.97-115
2023
DOI: 10.1080/23743670.2024.2308896
url
https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/32027/1/AfricanJournalismStudiesTullySingerFactChecks124.pdfView
Open Access

Abstract

This study examines fact-checking of the misinformation about Covid-19 circulating in Sub-Saharan Africa in 2020. It uses thematic textual analysis to understand the geographic scope, sources, and themes of hundreds of hoaxes from across Sub-Saharan Africa indexed in the #CoronaVirusFacts Alliance database. In addition, it explores a subset of debunked items from Nigeria to demonstrate efforts to go beyond traditional fact-checking to educate audiences about public health and media literacy, using strategies that are consistent with inoculation theory. Findings show that misinformation about “cures” and politics were major themes of Covid-19 falsehoods circulating in Sub-Saharan Africa during the first year of the pandemic. In addition to correcting false information, fact-checkers in Nigeria regularly provided public health and media literacy information in their fact-checks. Fact-checkers may epitomise a new type of journalistic actor well-suited to the chaotic world of social media and viral misinformation, as they offer both direct refutations of false information and tactics for audiences to engage in their own critical assessment of news and information.
DT Africa HN Social history and conditions. Social problems. Social reform PN Literature (General) QR180 Immunology RA0421 Public health. Hygiene. Preventive Medicine

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