Conspiracy theories during Covid 19: The case of Denmark

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearch

Standard

Conspiracy theories during Covid 19: The case of Denmark. / Bengtsson, Mette; Hansen, Anna Schjøtt; Hartley, Jannie Møller; Bæk Kristensen, Jakob; Mayerhöffer, Eva; Ramsland, Tim.

Conspiracy theories during Covid 19: The case of Denmark. 2021.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearch

Harvard

Bengtsson, M, Hansen, AS, Hartley, JM, Bæk Kristensen, J, Mayerhöffer, E & Ramsland, T 2021, Conspiracy theories during Covid 19: The case of Denmark. in Conspiracy theories during Covid 19: The case of Denmark. https://doi.org/10.5281/ZENODO.5556012

APA

Bengtsson, M., Hansen, A. S., Hartley, J. M., Bæk Kristensen, J., Mayerhöffer, E., & Ramsland, T. (2021). Conspiracy theories during Covid 19: The case of Denmark. In Conspiracy theories during Covid 19: The case of Denmark https://doi.org/10.5281/ZENODO.5556012

Vancouver

Bengtsson M, Hansen AS, Hartley JM, Bæk Kristensen J, Mayerhöffer E, Ramsland T. Conspiracy theories during Covid 19: The case of Denmark. In Conspiracy theories during Covid 19: The case of Denmark. 2021 https://doi.org/10.5281/ZENODO.5556012

Author

Bengtsson, Mette ; Hansen, Anna Schjøtt ; Hartley, Jannie Møller ; Bæk Kristensen, Jakob ; Mayerhöffer, Eva ; Ramsland, Tim. / Conspiracy theories during Covid 19: The case of Denmark. Conspiracy theories during Covid 19: The case of Denmark. 2021.

Bibtex

@inbook{3cb9ad2e17be402e98ad6678482f88c9,
title = "Conspiracy theories during Covid 19: The case of Denmark",
abstract = "This white paper investigates the nature and prevalence of conspiratorial thinking in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic in Denmark. It aims to qualify the current debate regarding conspiracy theories in this context by approaching the phenomenon from multiple methodological angles.Danish-language Facebook posts serve as the point of departure for this study. First, the paper explores the conspiratorial rhetoric in Danish Facebook posts to understand how people who believe in conspiracies have taken part in the online debate. Second, it analyses how content labelled as misinformation has spread across online platforms and whether content that can be considered conspiratorial has played a special role. Third, it examines whether the amount of conspiratorial content has increased during the pandemic in selected corona-critical Facebook groups. The paper does not assume a particular normative standpoint when engaging with the data; rather, it seeks to provide a nuanced and empirically grounded assessment of the nature and prevalence of conspiratorial thinking in Denmark in terms of both quality and quantity.This white paper is a joint effort by researchers affiliated with the DataPublics and Alter-Publics projects as well as the Center for News Research at Roskilde University. We thank Thomas Hedin and the entire staff at TjekDet for their insights regarding their fact-checking routines and the assistance with data collection. We also express our gratitude to the Illum Foundation for their financial support of this study.",
author = "Mette Bengtsson and Hansen, {Anna Schj{\o}tt} and Hartley, {Jannie M{\o}ller} and {B{\ae}k Kristensen}, Jakob and Eva Mayerh{\"o}ffer and Tim Ramsland",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.5281/ZENODO.5556012",
language = "Dansk",
isbn = "978-87-995360-8-5",
booktitle = "Conspiracy theories during Covid 19: The case of Denmark",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Conspiracy theories during Covid 19: The case of Denmark

AU - Bengtsson, Mette

AU - Hansen, Anna Schjøtt

AU - Hartley, Jannie Møller

AU - Bæk Kristensen, Jakob

AU - Mayerhöffer, Eva

AU - Ramsland, Tim

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - This white paper investigates the nature and prevalence of conspiratorial thinking in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic in Denmark. It aims to qualify the current debate regarding conspiracy theories in this context by approaching the phenomenon from multiple methodological angles.Danish-language Facebook posts serve as the point of departure for this study. First, the paper explores the conspiratorial rhetoric in Danish Facebook posts to understand how people who believe in conspiracies have taken part in the online debate. Second, it analyses how content labelled as misinformation has spread across online platforms and whether content that can be considered conspiratorial has played a special role. Third, it examines whether the amount of conspiratorial content has increased during the pandemic in selected corona-critical Facebook groups. The paper does not assume a particular normative standpoint when engaging with the data; rather, it seeks to provide a nuanced and empirically grounded assessment of the nature and prevalence of conspiratorial thinking in Denmark in terms of both quality and quantity.This white paper is a joint effort by researchers affiliated with the DataPublics and Alter-Publics projects as well as the Center for News Research at Roskilde University. We thank Thomas Hedin and the entire staff at TjekDet for their insights regarding their fact-checking routines and the assistance with data collection. We also express our gratitude to the Illum Foundation for their financial support of this study.

AB - This white paper investigates the nature and prevalence of conspiratorial thinking in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic in Denmark. It aims to qualify the current debate regarding conspiracy theories in this context by approaching the phenomenon from multiple methodological angles.Danish-language Facebook posts serve as the point of departure for this study. First, the paper explores the conspiratorial rhetoric in Danish Facebook posts to understand how people who believe in conspiracies have taken part in the online debate. Second, it analyses how content labelled as misinformation has spread across online platforms and whether content that can be considered conspiratorial has played a special role. Third, it examines whether the amount of conspiratorial content has increased during the pandemic in selected corona-critical Facebook groups. The paper does not assume a particular normative standpoint when engaging with the data; rather, it seeks to provide a nuanced and empirically grounded assessment of the nature and prevalence of conspiratorial thinking in Denmark in terms of both quality and quantity.This white paper is a joint effort by researchers affiliated with the DataPublics and Alter-Publics projects as well as the Center for News Research at Roskilde University. We thank Thomas Hedin and the entire staff at TjekDet for their insights regarding their fact-checking routines and the assistance with data collection. We also express our gratitude to the Illum Foundation for their financial support of this study.

U2 - 10.5281/ZENODO.5556012

DO - 10.5281/ZENODO.5556012

M3 - Bidrag til bog/antologi

SN - 978-87-995360-8-5

BT - Conspiracy theories during Covid 19: The case of Denmark

ER -

ID: 297060495