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@article{ Riedlinger2024,
 title = {Fact-Checking Role Performances and Problematic Covid-19 Vaccine Content in Latin America and Sub-Saharan Africa},
 author = {Riedlinger, Michelle and Montaña-Niño, Silvia and Watt, Ned and García-Perdomo, Víctor and Joubert, Marina},
 journal = {Media and Communication},
 volume = {12},
 year = {2024},
 issn = {2183-2439},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.17645/mac.8680},
 abstract = {The move from political fact-checking to a "public health" or debunking model of fact-checking, sustained by policies and funding from platforms, highlights important tensions in the case of Covid-19. Building on findings from studies focused on journalistic role performance, we investigated how professional fact-checkers in Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa conceived of and performed their professional roles when addressing Covid-19 vaccination topics. Interviews with fact-checkers from six well-established, Meta-affiliated, International Fact-Checking Network-accredited organizations operating in these regions indicated that fact-checkers recognized the diversification of tasks and new roles associated with addressing problematic content from social media users. However, fact-checkers expressed unanimous commitment to prioritizing political and media watchdog activities in response to problematic Covid-19 vaccine information spreading from elite sources. To compare these role conceptions with role performance, we conducted a content analysis of Covid-19 vaccine content posted in 2021 to these fact-checkers' Facebook accounts. We found that content was mostly associated with explainers or debunking content (addressing hoaxes or rumors about Covid-19 vaccines from non-elite social media users). In particular, the abundance of explainers, compared with other genres of fact-checking content, aligns fact-checkers with professional roles as civic service providers, educators, and "interpreters" of health information. Only a small proportion of the Covid-19 vaccine-related posts from each fact-checker contained verifications of claims from authoritative (elite "top-down") sources (i.e., politicians, media, and health/science professionals). This study offers insights into a particularly tumultuous time of political activity in these regions and considers implications for practice innovation.},
 keywords = {Afrika; Africa; Lateinamerika; Latin America; Soziale Medien; social media; Impfung; vaccination; Infektionskrankheit; contagious disease; Facebook; facebook; Politik; politics; Falschmeldung; false report; politische Aktivität; political activity}}