Public Policy

Video: What is ‘Post-Truth’? What Can We Do About It? Public Policy
Some panelists of the RSS panel, from left: Will Moy, Helen Margetts, Hetan Shaw and Tracey Brown

Video: What is ‘Post-Truth’? What Can We Do About It?

February 22, 2017 1348

RSS panel on post-truth

Some panelists of the RSS panel, from left: Will Moy, Helen Margetts, Hetan Shah and Tracey Brown

The Oxford Dictionary named ‘post-truth’ as its word of the year in 2016, but what is ‘post-truth,’ what can we do about it, and what significance do terms like this and the ever popular emerging ‘fake news’ and ‘alternative facts’ mean for the changing expectations and engagement of our society?

At a panel debate held by the Royal Statistical Society (RSS) entitled ‘Post-truth: what is it and what can we do about it,’ panelists data journalist James Ball (BuzzFeed, and author of forthcoming book on ‘post-truth’), Tracey Brown (director of Sense about Science), Will Moy (director of Full Fact), Helen Margetts (director of the Oxford Internet Institute), and Hetan Shah, who heads the RSS and chaired the event, debated this new phenomenon.

The good use of evidence and statistics in public debate is hugely important and the EU referendum and the American election are both examples of where the political misuse of statistics and facts has become commonplace. The panel discussed what is ‘post-truth’, and whether or not there is something genuinely new about our current era, or if this is a new word about the same old age problem? Moving forwards, the panellists sought to seek an action plan around what can be done to ensure that statistics, facts and evidence always form part of a balanced debate in the media and politics.

‘Post-truth: what is it and what can we do about it?’ was held by the RSS, in association with Sense about Science, Full Fact and the Oxford Internet Institute, on February 7, 2017.  Learn more about the event here.

***

Looking for an easy way to spot fake news? Download this free checklist from CQ Press.


Sage, the parent of Social Science Space, is a global academic publisher of books, journals, and library resources with a growing range of technologies to enable discovery, access, and engagement. Believing that research and education are critical in shaping society, 24-year-old Sara Miller McCune founded Sage in 1965. Today, we are controlled by a group of trustees charged with maintaining our independence and mission indefinitely. 

View all posts by Sage

Related Articles

There’s Something in the Air, Part 2 – But It’s Not a Miasma
Insights
April 15, 2024

There’s Something in the Air, Part 2 – But It’s Not a Miasma

Read Now
To Better Forecast AI, We Need to Learn Where Its Money Is Pointing
Innovation
April 10, 2024

To Better Forecast AI, We Need to Learn Where Its Money Is Pointing

Read Now
A Community Call: Spotlight on Women’s Safety in the Music Industry 
Insights
March 22, 2024

A Community Call: Spotlight on Women’s Safety in the Music Industry 

Read Now
Charles V. Hamilton, 1929-2023: The Philosopher Behind ‘Black Power’
Career
March 5, 2024

Charles V. Hamilton, 1929-2023: The Philosopher Behind ‘Black Power’

Read Now
Did the Mainstream Make the Far-Right Mainstream?

Did the Mainstream Make the Far-Right Mainstream?

The processes of mainstreaming and normalization of far-right politics have much to do with the mainstream itself, if not more than with the far right.

Read Now
SSRC Links with U.S. Treasury on Evaluation Projects

SSRC Links with U.S. Treasury on Evaluation Projects

Thanks to a partnership between the SSRC and the US Department of the Treasury, two new research opportunities in program evaluation – the Homeowner Assistance Fund Project and the State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds Project – have opened.

Read Now
The Use of Bad Data Reveals a Need for Retraction in Governmental Data Bases

The Use of Bad Data Reveals a Need for Retraction in Governmental Data Bases

Retractions are generally framed as a negative: as science not working properly, as an embarrassment for the institutions involved, or as a flaw in the peer review process. They can be all those things. But they can also be part of a story of science working the right way: finding and correcting errors, and publicly acknowledging when information turns out to be incorrect.

Read Now
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments