Results 211 to 220 of about 114,493 (301)
Political Trust and Aspirations to Influence Social Media During a Crisis: A Longitudinal Study
ABSTRACT This study investigated how political trust shaped citizens' aspirations to influence others on social media during a COVID‐19 pandemic. Using four‐wave longitudinal survey data (2017–2021; N = 2172) collected from 543 citizens in Finland, we first analysed how political trust moderated the temporal development of individuals' aspirations to ...
Aki Koivula +2 more
wiley +1 more source
The Role of Social Movements in Reducing Harmful Corporate Practices Comment on "National Public Health Surveillance of Corporations in Key Unhealthy Commodity Industries - A Scoping Review and Framework Synthesis". [PDF]
Freudenberg N.
europepmc +1 more source
Blame and Cost: Understanding Responsibility Attribution and Financial Risk in AI Usage
ABSTRACT This study examines public perceptions of responsibility and potential damage associated with AI usage across various scenarios, and estimates the financial impact on firms. The survey‐based analyses of AI failures evaluating hypothetical risk scenarios and their economic consequences reveal that sociodemographic determinants shape the ...
Dorian Fildor +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Trust, Information and Vaccine Aonfidence in Crisis Settings: A Scoping Review. [PDF]
Dwyer H +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
African Decolonial Theory: A Conversation
Abstract Antipode has become a key platform for engaging with decolonial and anticolonial scholarship, as well as adjacent fields such as Black geographies, Indigenous studies, Latin American feminism, and work on settler‐colonialism. African reference points in this literature, however, have been far less common, both in the journal and more broadly ...
Patricia Daley +10 more
wiley +1 more source
Resurfacing the Threat of Asymptomatic Syphilis: A Retrospective Analysis of Clinico-epidemiological Trends of Syphilis at a Tertiary Care Centre in Eastern Uttar Pradesh. [PDF]
Iftikhar S +4 more
europepmc +1 more source
ABSTRACT This article engages race, infrastructural violence, and spatial memory in Ferguson, Missouri—the St. Louis suburb where police killed 18‐year‐old Michael Brown, Jr. in August 2014. It examines Black communities' use of blockades, space‐based protests, and infrastructural disruption in Ferguson before and after the teenager's execution.
Rashad Arman Timmons
wiley +1 more source

