Social Science Research Council Research AMP Just Tech

Key Issues and Cases in Developing Transnational Digital Futures

For the final installment of MediaWell’s video essay series on transnational digital governance, researcher and lawyer Camila Tsuzuki explains the background of the key legal cases currently shaping Brazil’s digital regulatory landscape.

The Brazilian government is currently deliberating legal safeguards surrounding online trust, safety, and content moderation. Tsuzuki explores these measures’ potential impacts on the use of biometric technologies, platform capacity and transparency, and privacy and data protection. 

Digital Watchdogs: How Civil Society Keeps Tech Platforms Accountable

The decisions that govern the Internet can seem out of the hands of the people that use it, shaped instead almost entirely by governments and large tech corporations. But how can civil society help foster healthier, more democratic digital ecosystems? 

As part of MediaWell’s video essay series on transnational digital governance, Swati Srivastava (Purdue University) explores the influence of civil society groups. Watchdogs like Ranking Digital Rights offer an important counterweight against more powerful actors by creating cross-platform, human rights-focused scorecards – raising the bar for accountability and transparency in the digital sphere.

Digital Disjunction: Platforms in the Age of Conflicting Governance

Digital content doesn’t stop at national borders. Social media companies have long had to navigate competing expectations, often by tailoring their platforms to the demands of key markets; as a result, regulations set in one place shape the user experience in another. But what happens when those markets take opposite approaches to content moderation? 

As part of MediaWell’s video essay series on transnational digital governance, tech governance scholar Swati Srivastava (Purdue University) explores the uncertainties of what she calls a “new era of platform governance” – the growing divergence between countries in the Global North, the reality of most users living in the Global South, and how platforms are rethinking how they make decisions about governance, power, and authority

Research Review

Like & Subscribe: Influencers and the Shift to Parasocial Authority

Who gets to be influential, and at what cost? Over the past two decades, public attention spans and approaches to “truth” have undergone significant transformation: from legacy media to short-form video, credentialed expertise to projected authenticity, and, increasingly, from human influencers to AI-generated ones. 

In this research review, communications scholar Julia Jeonghyun Parke provides a detailed look into social media influencers as voices of authority in the public sphere – how success is shaped by algorithms and social hierarchies, and where new frameworks are needed to understand one of the biggest shifts in our contemporary media landscape.

The New Order of Global Tech Policy

For his second video essay in MediaWell’s series on transnational digital governance, law and technology expert Dr. Ivar Hartmann (Insper, Brazil) highlights key issues for U.S. media and civil society – at a time when many countries, especially across the Global South, are looking elsewhere for regulatory inspiration. 

This essay explores some of these rising models of global tech policy: the influence of EU-style AI regulation, the role that procedural rights can play in content moderation, and possibilities for improving the digital public sphere.

Research Topics

  • False Narratives and their Contexts

    Conspiracy theories, vaccine misinformation, scams and frauds, and influence operations can flourish online. This research topic delves deep into case studies that analyze the complex dynamics and histories of the circulation of false information, examining the actors, their incentives, and their relationships with the media and affected communities.  
  • Targeted Disinformation

    Recent research reveals how contemporary online harassment fits into historical patterns of oppression of women, minorities, and vulnerable groups.
  • Algorithms and Automation

    Researchers are exploring how disinformation campaigns use bots and automation tools, and how algorithms can encode and reproduce biases and ideologies.

Research Reviews

Articles


Profiles

  • Associate Professor – Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey
    Contributor
  • New Media and Public Humanities Postdoctoral Fellow, Jackman Humanities Institute, University of Toronto
    Contributor

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