FAKE NEWS AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR THE ACHIEVEMENT OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS IN DELTA STATE
Abstract
Keywords
Full Text:
PDFReferences
Adekunle, A., & Adnan, H. (2016). COMMUNICATING HEALTH: MEDIA FRAMING OF EBOLA OUTBREAK IN NIGERIAN NEWSPAPERS. Jurnal Komunikasi: Malaysian Journal of Communication, 32, 362-380
Adeniran, R., & Oso, L. (2020). Making health news: Examining how health influencers drive coverage of maternal and child healthcare issues in Nigerian newspapers. , 33, 47-60.
Adesanya, O., & Ilori, M. (2025). The digital battlefield: Examining the intersection of social media, fake news, and effects in Nigeria. Library and Information Perspectives and Research.
Apuke, O., & Omar, B. (2020). How do Nigerian newspapers report COVID-19 pandemic? The implication for awareness and prevention. Health Education Research, 35, 471 - 480.
Apuke, O., & Omar, B. (2021). Television News Coverage of COVID-19 Pandemic in Nigeria: Missed Opportunities to Promote Health Due to Ownership and Politics. SAGE Open, 11.
Barchetti, A., Neybert, E., Mantel, S., & Kardes, F. (2022). The Half-Truth Effect and Its Implications for Sustainability. Sustainability.
Becerra, T., & Lau, J. (2020). MIL Competency Framework: Mapping Media and Information Competencies. Anagramas Rumbos y Sentidos de la Comunicación, 19, 49-67.
Cacciatore, M., Scheufele, D., & Iyengar, S. (2016). The End of Framing as we Know it … and the Future of Media Effects. Mass Communication and Society, 19, 23 - 7.
Czvetkó, T., Honti, G., Sebestyén, V., & Abonyi, J. (2021). The intertwining of world news with Sustainable Development Goals: An effective monitoring tool. Heliyon, 7.
Danielski, K., Prado, M., De Lima, M., Kempfer, S., Heinzle, M., & Canever, B. (2020). Tecnologias de informação e comunicação para a educação para cidadania global de enfermeiros. , 4, 7-21.
Dudziak, E., Ferreira, S., & Ferrari, A. (2017). Competência Informacional e Midiática: uma revisão dos principais marcos políticos expressos por declarações e documentos. , 13, 213-253.
Flusberg, S., Holmes, K., Thibodeau, P., Nabi, R., & Matlock, T. (2024). The Psychology of Framing: How Everyday Language Shapes the Way We Think, Feel, and Act. Psychological Science in the Public Interest, 25, 105 - 161.
Geise, S., & Xu, Y. (2024). Effects of Visual Framing in Multimodal Media Environments: A Systematic Review of Studies Between 1979 and 2023. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, 102, 796 – 823
Goubitz, A. (2014) Participants of the first European MIL Forum adopt Paris Declaration on Media and Information Literacy in the Digital Era. , 10-11.
Grizzle, A., Moore, P., Dezuanni, M., Asthana, S., Wilson, C., Banda, F., & Onumah, C. (2014). Media and information literacy: policy and strategy guidelines. Unesco.
Guenther, L., Gaertner, M., & Zeitz, J. (2020). Framing as a Concept for Health Communication: A Systematic Review. Health Communication, 36, 891 - 899.
Lee, J. (2021). An Exploratory Study on the Establishment and Provision of Universal Literacy for Sustainable Development in the Era of Fake News. Journal of The Korean Society for Library and Information Science, 55, 85-106.
Nelson, T., Oxley, Z., & Clawson, R. (1997). Toward a Psychology of Framing Effects. Political Behavior, 19, 221-246.
Nwakpu, E., Ezema, V., & Ogbodo, J. (2020). Nigeria media framing of coronavirus pandemic and audience response. Health Promotion Perspectives, 10, 192 - 199.Entman, R. M. (1993). “Framing: Toward Clarification of a Fractured Paradigm.” Journal of Communication, 43(4), 51–58.
Ojobo O. L., Okpako A. E. & Ivwighren, H. E. (2022) Covid-19 pandemic misinformation and disinformation on social media: a study of Abraka metropolis Journal Innovations. Vol 70. 1045-1064
Olaniyan, A., & Akpojivi, U. (2020). Transforming communication, social media, counter-hegemony and the struggle for the soul of Nigeria. Information, Communication & Society, 24, 422 - 437.
Ope-Davies, T., & Shodipe, M. (2023). A multimodal discourse study of selected COVID-19 online public health campaign texts in Nigeria. Discourse & Society, 34, 96 - 119.
Oyama, O., & Okpara, N. (2017). Health Communication: The Responsibility of the Media in Nigeria. specialty journal of medical research and health science. Vol 2 (3): 1-4
Sale, J., Lohfeld, L., & Brazil, K. (2002). Revisiting the Quantitative-Qualitative Debate: Implications for Mixed-Methods Research. Quality and Quantity, 36, 43-53.
Sánchez, S., Rojo, A., Martínez, A., & Samaniego, M. (2019). Media and information literacy: a measurement instrument for adolescents. Educational Review, 73, 487 - 502.
Scheufele, D. (1999). Framing as a theory of media effects. Journal of Communication, 49, 103-122
Schuldt, J., & Roh, S. (2014). Media Frames and Cognitive Accessibility: What Do “Global Warming” and “Climate Change” Evoke in Partisan Minds?. Environmental Communication, 8, 529 - 548
Stewart, E. (2021). Detecting Fake News: Two Problems for Content Moderation. Philosophy & Technology, 34, 923 - 940.
Swain, R., & Wallentin, F. (2019). Achieving sustainable development goals: predicaments and strategies. International Journal of Sustainable Development & World Ecology, 27, 106 – 96
Tornero, J., Tejedor, S., & Oliva, M. (2015). Towards a global strategy for media and information literacy. 0247-254.
Vese, D. (2021). Governing Fake News: The Regulation of Social Media and the Right to Freedom of Expression in the Era of Emergency. European Journal of Risk Regulation, 13, 477 - 513.
Villar, L., Herrero, L., & López, G. (2022). UNESCO Strategy and Digital Policies for Teacher Training: The Deconstruction of Innovation in Spain. Journal of New Approaches in Educational Research, 11, 15 – 30
DOI: https://doi.org/10.30596/ijessr.v7i1.28678
Refbacks
- There are currently no refbacks.

.png)

