Results 11 to 20 of about 82,288 (165)

Support for misinformation regulation on social media: It is the perceived harm of misinformation that matters, not the perceived amount

open access: yesPolicy &Internet, Volume 15, Issue 4, Page 731-749, December 2023., 2023
Abstract Responding to harmful content on social media, calls for regulations are coming up to break down the black boxes of social media platforms in handling misinformation. Examples are requiring cooperations with fact‐checkers or the government stepping in.
Isabelle Freiling   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Care on the move: the gender care gap and intra‐EU mobility

open access: yesJournal of Law and Society, Volume 50, Issue 4, Page 558-578, December 2023., 2023
Abstract The structure, interpretation, and implementation of the European Union (EU) free movement of persons rules mean that when one's circumstances involve caring responsibilities, the quality of one's rights and protections under EU law diminishes.
NINA MILLER
wiley   +1 more source

Islands, the Anthropocene, and Decolonisation

open access: yesAntipode, Volume 55, Issue 4, Page 1255-1274, July 2023., 2023
Abstract The Anthropocene is deployed as incontrovertible fact, yet its foundations merit strong critique to challenge how particular voices and locations are absented, silenced, or enrolled in the fallacies that attend this epochal framework. Other placed, grounded, and scale‐sensitive explanations exist for present and future state scenarios ...
Elaine Stratford   +8 more
wiley   +1 more source

Refusing aid

open access: yesAmerican Ethnologist, Volume 50, Issue 1, Page 103-114, February 2023., 2023
Abstract “Aid dependency” has long been a concern among development organizations, because it supposedly discourages the entrepreneurial spirit and thus hinders economic development. But what happens when beneficiaries refuse aid? In this article, I offer an ethnographic account of aid refusal in postconflict northern Uganda.
Sarah O'Sullivan
wiley   +1 more source

Teenage Pregnancy and Neoliberal Subjectivity in Mexican Television Series La Rosa de Guadalupe

open access: yesBulletin of Latin American Research, Volume 42, Issue 1, Page 67-80, January 2023., 2023
This article examines teenage pregnancy narratives in Televisa's La Rosa de Guadalupe, Mexico's most‐watched television programme. Adolescent pregnancy in Mexico is considered a pressing social and political challenge, cutting across broader efforts by the state to regulate population growth and lower maternal morbidity during the second half of the ...
Rebecca Ogden
wiley   +1 more source

Data justice and biodiversity conservation

open access: yesConservation Biology, Volume 36, Issue 5, October 2022., 2022
Abstract Increases in data availability coupled with enhanced computational capacities are revolutionizing conservation. But in the excitement over the opportunities afforded by new data, there has been less discussion of the justice implications of data used in conservation, that is, how people and environments are represented through data, the ...
Rose Pritchard   +4 more
wiley   +1 more source

Invented Modernisms: Getting to Grips with Modernity in Three African State Buildings

open access: yesCurator: The Museum Journal, Volume 65, Issue 3, Page 569-589, July 2022., 2022
Abstract This article examines recent attempts to create specifically African forms of modernist political architecture that draw on ‘traditional’ or ‘pre‐colonial’ aesthetic forms and ideas. Taking examples of three prestigious structures – the presidential palace in Ghana, the parliament in Malawi and the Northern Cape regional parliament in South ...
Kuukuwa Manful   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Suspicion as care: Rumor and accusation in community mental health

open access: yesEthos, Volume 53, Issue 4, December 2025.
Abstract This article examines Perú’s transition from mental healthcare in psychiatric hospitals to a Community Mental Health (CMH) model. Based on 18 months of fieldwork on the outskirts of Lima, I show that one of CMH's effects has been an unexpected increase in rumors and accusations between neighbors.
Julio Villa‐Palomino
wiley   +1 more source

Restoring Public Trust After a Data Breach Crisis: Reputational Response Strategies for Government, For‐Profit, and Nonprofit Organizations

open access: yesRisk, Hazards &Crisis in Public Policy, Volume 16, Issue 3, September 2025.
ABSTRACT This article examines how organizations across sectors can reduce reputational damage and rebuild trust among stakeholders after a data breach crisis. While existing research suggests sectoral differences in public trust and reputation, we lack systematic evidence about how sector type may impact organizational responses to crises.
Junghwa Choi   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

Responsabilidade civil do estado - Dano material - Dano moral

open access: yesRevista de Direito Administrativo, 1986
Supremo Tribunal ...
openaire   +1 more source

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