News

Digital Democracy Project to examine online disinformation

Published: 27 November 2018

Source: Max Bell School of Public Policy

Public Policy Forum President & CEO Edward Greenspon and recently appointed Max Bell School of Public Policy professor Taylor Owen announced the launch of a multi-year project to analyze and respond to the increasing amounts of disinformation and hate in the digital public sphere.

The Digital Democracy Project (DDP) will commission research and journalism to gain a greater understanding of how disinformation is growing in the digital ecosystem. It will monitor digital and social media in real time, coordinate with international research and policy development projects, and develop public policy responses to counter these threats to democratic institutions and social cohesion.

This work flows from PPF’s earlier studies, including The Shattered Mirror: News, Democracy and Trust in the Digital Age and Democracy Divided: Countering Disinformation and Hate in the Digital Public Sphere. Mr. Greenspon and Professor Owen worked on both reports.

The Digital Democracy Project will initially focus on studying and communicating the impact of misinformation in the lead-up to the October 2019 federal election.

“We have learned through our previous research that this country lacks adequate understanding of what’s being put through our media ecosystem by those seeking to divide and disorient Canadians for their own ideological, commercial or geo-political reasons,” Mr. Greenspon said. “This project is designed to expose these attempts and determine how best to counter them and propose long-term solutions.”

“Threats to the integrity of our public sphere and the undermining of elections are serious threats to democracy,” said Prof. Owen, who is taking up an appointment in January 2019 at McGill University’s Max Bell School of Public Policy, where he will hold the Beaverbrook Chair in Media, Ethics and Communications. “Further research and active monitoring is necessary to better understand and ultimately counter these threats. The Digital Democracy Project will ensure that media organizations, academic researchers and policymakers have the knowledge and the policy responses needed to protect Canadian democratic institutions and to as best as possible ensure social cohesion.”

“Prof. Owen’s work with the Digital Democracy Project will ensure our school plays an important role in addressing these challenges and we are delighted to be collaborating with the Public Policy Forum on such a timely and vital issue for Canadian democracy," said Chris Ragan, Director of the Max Bell School of Public Policy.

About the Max Bell School of Public Policy
McGill’s Max Bell School of Public Policy is committed to the research, teaching, outreach, and engagement on issues of sound public policy. Each of these four dimensions are grounded in a solid understanding of the overall policy process, not merely as it is described in theory but as it exists in the real world, with all its imperfections and limitations. The principle-based design of policy solutions to important problems, the interaction of policy development with partisan politics, and knowledge of the workings of the machinery of government all play central roles in the activities of the Max Bell School.

About the Public Policy Forum
The Public Policy Forum builds bridges among diverse participants in the policy-making process and gives them a platform to examine issues, offer new perspectives and feed fresh ideas into policy discussions. We believe good policy makes a better Canada.

Further Information:

Nicholas Salter
Communications Officer
Max Bell School of Public Policy
Nicholas.salter [at] mcgill.ca
514-928-3706

Carl Neustaedter
Director of Communications
Public Policy Forum
cneustaedter [at] ppforum.ca
613-866-7210

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