ยฉ UNESCO 2018

Journalism, Fake News & Disinformation: Handbook for Journalism Education and Training

Author
Julie PosettiCherilyn IretonClaire WardleHossein DerakhshanAlice MatthewsMagda Abu-FadilTom TrewinnardFergus BellAlexios Mantzarlis
Corporate Author
UNESCO
ISBN
ISBN 978-92-3-100281-6
Collation
128 p.; illustrations
Resource Language
EnglishFrenchSpanishRussianArabicKoreanVietnameseIndonesianPortugueseThaiKazakhTajikKyrgyzMalayMacedonianBosnianAlbanianKhmerDutchBurmesePersianGeorgianRomanianBulgarianGreekTurkishTamilHindiSwahiliGermanJapanesePolish
Year of publication
2018
Keyword
JournalismMisinformationSocial mediaMedia literacyInformation literacyMIL

This handbook seeks to provide an internationally-relevant model curriculum, open to adoption or adaptation, which responds to the emerging global problem of disinformation that confronts societies in general, and journalism in particular. Serving as a model curriculum, the publication is designed to give journalism educators and trainers a framework and lessons to help students and practitioners of journalism to navigate the issues associated with โ€˜fake newsโ€™.

The contents draw together the input of leading international journalism educators, researchers and thinkers who are helping to update journalism method and practice to deal with the challenges of misinformation and disinformation. The lessons are contextual, theoretical and in the case of online verification, extremely practical. Used together as a course, or independently, they can help refresh existing teaching modules or create new offerings.

It is part of the โ€œGlobal Initiative for Excellence in Journalism Educationโ€, which is a focus of UNESCOโ€™s International Programme for the Development of Communication (IPDC). The Initiative seeks to engage with teaching, practising and researching of journalism from a global perspective, including sharing international good practices.