
Digital Fact Checking with Fact Check NI
Over the next month or so we’ll be looking back at some of the great work done in our Civic Activism Programme. Next up it is: Digital Fact Checking with Fact Check NI.
The Northern Ireland Foundation was started in the belief that local communities and neighborhoods are best placed to take decisions for themselves when it comes to providing public services.
Their work with Ulster University and its Advanced Diploma on Civic Leadership and Community Development brought together elected members of municipalities and representatives of statutory bodies and the voluntary and community sectors.
In the international arena, the Foundation-run Forum for Cities in Transition brings together the same mix of people from contested places around the world, who meet annually to share experiences and lessons. At the culmination of the forum, delegates pledge to undertake projects in collaboration with each other.
The NI Foundation’s Civic Activism Awards project will do exactly what it says on the tin. It will work to address the issue of false or misleading information in the public domain, through undertaking and publishing high quality research into key issues of public concern.
In doing so it will seek to reduce public confusion regarding political issues in NI, will enable citizens to hold public figures, political groups and the media to account on public statements made, and it will distill key facts from complex data for use by the community and voluntary sector and others.
Fact Check NI will be a platform that promotes a collaborative and bottom-up approach to the political debate, working with members of the voluntary, community and social enterprise sector, community workers, media editors and journalists, politicians and the general public.
They aim to work with as many of the 4,836 voluntary and community sector organisations in NI as possible to identify issues and gather information.
The project will aim to influence public policy in regards to the community and voluntary sector, keep politicians right in terms of both their promises and their rhetoric, and also influence the general public by providing access to non-biased, un-opinionated facts. The project will also encourage newspaper editors to publish corrections after inaccuracies appear in their outlets.
The digital fact-checking tool was chosen because, even though fact-checking sites are on the rise worldwide and there are currently three in the UK, none are dedicated to Northern Ireland or the island of Ireland.
The basic model for a fact-checking website is a blog-type format, with analysis of specific claims sorted by topic. The groups behind fact-checking websites tend to be independent non-profit organisations who often take on commissioned work and requests or suggestions for specific fact checks from the general public.
The Fact Check NI project will be divided into three phases. The first will include in-depth research into the various fact-checking mechanisms, drawing upon the best practice of these models to design a Northern Ireland-specific model.
Phase 2 will see the training of members of the public and third sector in fact-checking and anti-rumour techniques and processes. At this point the Foundation will also publish initial content and add an interactive fact-check guide to the website. In total the project will train 500 people in fact-checking methodologies.
Leave A Comment
There are currently no comments for this article, use the form above to comment.