6,188 research outputs found

    Replication Data for: Political Deepfakes are as Credible as Other Fake Media and (Sometimes) Real Media

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    Replication data for Political Deepfakes are as Credible as Other Fake Media and (Sometimes) Real Media. Primary data analysis and code work done by my co-authors Soubhik Barari and Christopher Lucas

    Replication Data for: Don't @ Me: Experimentally Reducing Partisan Incivility on Twitter

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    Replication Data for Don't @ Me: Experimentally Reducing Partisan Incivility on Twitte

    Replication Data for: Elites Tweet to get Feet off the Streets: Measuring Regime Social Media Strategies During Protest

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    As non-democratic regimes have adapted to the proliferation of social media, they have began actively engaging with Twitter to enhance regime resilience. Using data taken from the Twitter accounts of Venezuelan legislators during the 2014 anti-Maduro protests in Venezuela, we fit a topic model on the text of the tweets and analyze patterns in hashtag use by the two coalitions. We argue that the regime’s best strategy in the face of an existential threat like the narrative developed by La Salida and promoted on Twitter was to advance many competing narratives that addressed issues unrelated to the opposition’s criticism. Our results show that the two coalitions pursue different rhetorical strategies in keeping with our predictions about managing the conflict advanced by the protesters. This paper extends the literature on social media use during protests by focusing on active engagement with social media on the part of the regime. This approach corroborates and expands on recent research on inferring regime strategies from propaganda and censorship

    Replication Data for: Elites Tweet to get Feet off the Streets: Measuring Regime Social Media Strategies During Protest

    No full text
    As non-democratic regimes have adapted to the proliferation of social media, they have began actively engaging with Twitter to enhance regime resilience. Using data taken from the Twitter accounts of Venezuelan legislators during the 2014 anti-Maduro protests in Venezuela, we fit a topic model on the text of the tweets and analyze patterns in hashtag use by the two coalitions. We argue that the regime’s best strategy in the face of an existential threat like the narrative developed by La Salida and promoted on Twitter was to advance many competing narratives that addressed issues unrelated to the opposition’s criticism. Our results show that the two coalitions pursue different rhetorical strategies in keeping with our predictions about managing the conflict advanced by the protesters. This paper extends the literature on social media use during protests by focusing on active engagement with social media on the part of the regime. This approach corroborates and expands on recent research on inferring regime strategies from propaganda and censorship

    New Zealand’s 1973 experience suggests Brexit will be economically harmful for the foreseeable future, and the losses will not be easily made up

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    To investigate historical antecedents for the likely effects of Brexit, Kevin B. Grier and Michael C. Munger consider the impact of Britain’s decision to join the EU on New Zealand’s economy. They find that the loss of preferential trade status in 1973 created a lost decade for New Zealand

    An interview with Kevin Brooks

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    An interview with young-adult author Kevin Brooks

    Kevin Brockmeier, Fiction Reading

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    October 25, 2013, Ulrich Museum of Art, Wichita State UniversityAward winning author Kevin Brockmeier, reads from his work.University Libraries, Department of English, Department of Women's Studies, Watermark Books & Cafe, Ulrich Museum of Ar
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