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    政大機構典藏 > 傳播學院 > 期刊論文 >  Item 140.119/133721
    Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://nccur.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/133721


    Title: Fake news practices in Indonesian newsrooms during and after the Palu earthquake: A Hierarchy-of-Influences approach
    Authors: 林翠絹
    Lin, T. T. C.
    Kwanda, F.
    Contributors: 傳播學院
    Keywords: Fake news;natural disaster;hierarchy of influences;news practices;Indonesia
    Date: 2020-05
    Issue Date: 2021-01-25 14:26:34 (UTC+8)
    Abstract: The viral dissemination of fake news threatens news organizations in Indonesia, with many social media users exhibiting a decrease in their trust of traditional media, as well as limited digital literacy. To investigate fake news during natural disasters, this mixedmethods study examines information patterns and journalistic practices of three news organizations during the 2018 Palu earthquake and tsunami. First, online observations of disasterrelated fake news cases on social media provide insights into how fake news was handled by three types of news media. The results show that when fake news concerned factual scientific evidence, news organizations unanimously used the government statements to debunk disinformation. In contrast, political or religious fake news had long lifecycles of polarized debates between progovernment groups and opponents. Using the Hierarchy-of Influences Model, in-depth interviews showed that individual-level journalistic professionalism mattered when tackling fake news reports, with some local practices differing from Western journalism approaches. At the routine level, news professionals treated the government as the authority to debunk controversial, high-risk fake news by presenting news only after official clarifications, while independent media tended to present balanced reports with diverse views. Additionally, interviewees revealed that organizational policies in relation to media types greatly influenced the handling of fake news practices in Indonesian newsrooms.
    Relation: Information, Communication and society, Volume 23, 2020 - Issue 6
    Data Type: article
    Appears in Collections:[傳播學院] 期刊論文

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