2 books found
by María Teresa Mercado Sáez, Gemma Teso Alonso, David Álvarez Rivas, Carlos Arcila-Calderón, Alejandro Barranquero Carretero, Rubén del Campo Hernández, Emilio Chuvieco, Alejandro Fernández Muerza, Rogelio Fernández Reyes, Juan Antonio Gaitán Moya, Francisco Heras Hernández, José María Herranz de la Casa, Carlos Lozano Ascencio, Miguel Ángel Mainar Jaime, Carmen del Rocío Monedero Morales, José María Montero Sandoval, Enrique Morales Corral, José Ángel Núñez, Maria Josep Picó Garcés, José Luis Piñuel Raigada, Daniel Rodrigo-Cano, Patricia Sánchez Holgado, Bruno Takahashi, Margarita Tovar Torrealba, Juan José Verón
2024 · Tecnos
El libro aborda prácticamente todos los aspectos relevantes desde el punto de vista de la práctica y la ética de un periodismo que cubre temas medioambientales y sectores afines, y comprometido con el riesgo climático que más amenaza el futuro inmediato de la humanidad.
by Branco Di Fátima, Allen Munoriyarwa, Anne Gilliland, Aondover Eric Msughter, Arantxa Vizcaíno-Verdú, Ebru Gökaliler, Edson Capoano, Huizi Yu, İnanç Alikılıç, Juan-Manuel González-Aguilar, Lida Tsene, Lizhou Fan, Macarena Parejo-Cuéllar, Mine Gencel Bek, Muluken Asegidew Chekol, Mykola Makhortykh, Özlem Alikılıç, Patricia de-Casas-Moreno, Tiago Lapa, Vinicius Prates, Vítor de Sousa
2023 · Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador
This book explores the nature of hate speech on social media. Readers will find chapters written by 21 authors from 18 universities or research centers. It includes researchers from 11 countries, prioritizing a diversity of approaches from the Global North and Global South – Brazil, Cyprus, Ethiopia, Germany, Nigeria, Portugal, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland, Turkey, and the USA. The analyses herein involve the realities in an even larger number of countries, given the transnational approach of some of these studies. One can find a preview of the chapters at the beginning of the book, with abstracts organized in a separate section. It is evident that the authors study the impact of recent events on hate speech – the Covid-19 pandemic, Russia- Ukraine war, the refugee crisis – and recurrent attacks on minority groups such as women, immigrants, or the LGBTQ+ community. The authors employ classic and digital research methods, using quantitative and qualitative data gathered from platforms like Telegram, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube. As a result, readers will encounter taxonomic proposals, new methodological approaches, theoretical frameworks, and mapping of behavioral patterns.