How isolated is Venezuela’s government from the people it supposedly represents? Very isolated indeed, according to a study commissioned by beyondbrics from Marco Ruediger and colleages at FGV DAPP, the department of public policy analysis at the Fundação Getulio Vergas in Rio de Janeiro. The study, derived from activity on Twitter, demonstrates the extreme polarisation of opinion in the country and suggests that Venezuela’s media, often either controlled or suppressed by the government, is increasingly lining up with opposition voices
This paper analyses Venezuelan journalists’ profiles in Twitter. The research is based on theoretica...
This is a mixed methods research thesis on how the Western press covers Venezuela. It found a pronou...
Over 4 million Venezuelans have left their country fleeing insecurity, violence, food and medicine...
How isolated is Venezuela’s government from the people it supposedly represents? Very isolated indee...
In this study, we analyze the evolution of the protests after the election of the Venezuelan Constit...
In this study, we analyze the evolution of the protests after the election of the Venezuelan Constit...
Venezuelans are living in the middle of a sociopolitical crisis that likely began in 1999 when Hugo ...
As non-democratic regimes have adapted to the proliferation of social media, they have began active...
A free and open press (unincumbered by political pressures) is necessary to hold government official...
Social and political bots have a small but strategic role in Venezuelan political conversations. The...
Academics, journalists, and researchers have conducted extensive qualitative research on the causali...
Various social media platforms have been used as tools by social movements and have propelled democr...
This article presents the results of an interdisciplinary research carried out by several universiti...
This paper aims to establish relevant features about social movement made through Twitter, as a resu...
The Venezuelan protests that emerged in the beginning of 2014 attracted a wide range of academic and...
This paper analyses Venezuelan journalists’ profiles in Twitter. The research is based on theoretica...
This is a mixed methods research thesis on how the Western press covers Venezuela. It found a pronou...
Over 4 million Venezuelans have left their country fleeing insecurity, violence, food and medicine...
How isolated is Venezuela’s government from the people it supposedly represents? Very isolated indee...
In this study, we analyze the evolution of the protests after the election of the Venezuelan Constit...
In this study, we analyze the evolution of the protests after the election of the Venezuelan Constit...
Venezuelans are living in the middle of a sociopolitical crisis that likely began in 1999 when Hugo ...
As non-democratic regimes have adapted to the proliferation of social media, they have began active...
A free and open press (unincumbered by political pressures) is necessary to hold government official...
Social and political bots have a small but strategic role in Venezuelan political conversations. The...
Academics, journalists, and researchers have conducted extensive qualitative research on the causali...
Various social media platforms have been used as tools by social movements and have propelled democr...
This article presents the results of an interdisciplinary research carried out by several universiti...
This paper aims to establish relevant features about social movement made through Twitter, as a resu...
The Venezuelan protests that emerged in the beginning of 2014 attracted a wide range of academic and...
This paper analyses Venezuelan journalists’ profiles in Twitter. The research is based on theoretica...
This is a mixed methods research thesis on how the Western press covers Venezuela. It found a pronou...
Over 4 million Venezuelans have left their country fleeing insecurity, violence, food and medicine...