Special Issue on Media, Trust, and Covid-19 Science

Very excited to share that this special issue of the Journal of Digital Social Research is out!

This was a project that’s been a long time in the works and has been a tremendously rewarding collaboration with my wonderful co-editors and numerous talented authors from around the world.

The issue is comprised of our thematic introduction, six original articles about empirical cases from North America, Brazil, and the Netherlands, and a preface by José van Dijck. Here’s the title and abstract to the introduction.

“Trust, Media, and Science in the Context of the Covid-19 Pandemic”

The first global pandemic of the information age has revealed how the coordinated spread of accurate information and the communication of relevant expert knowledge rely on functioning media channels, platforms, and institutions. As such, the coronavirus pandemic has exposed, and sometimes even catalyzed, longer-running societal processes through which traditional gatekeepers of scientific truth and expertise have been challenged or side – stepped, as alternative actors and institutions have taken the media stage and influenced policymaking spheres. To what extent has the changing media landscape contributed to (dis)trust in expertise? How do different political contexts shape the dynamics between science, policy, and diverse media publics? And in which ways does the contemporary spread of (mis/dis)information take shape? The articles in this collection address these questions by presenting original empirical analyses from a range of geographic and disciplinary vantage points.