Bolsonaro and the Far Right: How Disinformation About COVID-19 Circulates on Facebook in Brazil

Authors

  • Raquel Recuero Federal University of Pelotas, Brazil Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil MIDIARS Research Lab, Brazil
  • Felipe Bonow Soares MIDIARS Research Lab
  • Otávio Vinhas University College Dublin MIDIARS Research Lab
  • Taiane Volcan Federal University of Pelotas MIDIARS research lab
  • Luís Ricardo Goulart Hüttner Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul MIDIARS Research Lab
  • Victória Silva Universidade Federal de Pelotas MIDIARS Research Lab

Keywords:

disinformation, fact-checking, Facebook, COVID-19

Abstract

This article tackles the circulation of disinformation and compares it to fact-checking links about COVID-19 on Facebook in Brazil. Through a mixed-methods approach, we use disinformation and fact-checking links provided by the International Fact-Checking Network/Poynter, which we looked for in CrowdTangle. Using this data set, we explore (1) which types of public groups/pages spread disinformation and fact-checking content on Facebook; (2) the role of political ideology in this process; and (3) the network dynamics of how disinformation and fact-checking circulate on Facebook. Our results show that disinformation tend to circulate more on political pages/groups aligned with the far right and Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, on religious and conspiracy theory pages/groups and alternative (hyperpartisan) media. On the other hand, fact-checking circulates more on leftists’ pages/groups. This implicates that the discussion about COVID-19 in Brazil is influenced by a structure of asymmetric polarization, as disinformation spread is fueled by radicalized far-right groups.

Author Biographies

Raquel Recuero, Federal University of Pelotas, Brazil Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil MIDIARS Research Lab, Brazil

Professor at UFPEL (Universidade Federal de Pelotas) and UFRGS (Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul). Director of MIDIARS (Media, Discourse and Social Networks Research Lab)

Felipe Bonow Soares, MIDIARS Research Lab

Ph.D. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul. Researcher and coordinator at MIDIARS (Media, Discourse and Social Networks) research lab.

Otávio Vinhas, University College Dublin MIDIARS Research Lab

Ph.D. Student in Information and Communication studies at University College Dublin. Researcher at MIDIARS research lab. 

Taiane Volcan, Federal University of Pelotas MIDIARS research lab

PhD in Applied Linguistics from the Federal University of Pelotas (PPGL / UFPel) and works as a researcher at the Media Research, Discourse and Social Network Analysis Laboratory (MIDIARS).

Luís Ricardo Goulart Hüttner, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul MIDIARS Research Lab

PhD student in Communication at Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul and member of MIDIARS (Media, Discourse and Social Networks Research Lab)

Victória Silva, Universidade Federal de Pelotas MIDIARS Research Lab

Undergraduate in Journalism at Universidade Federal de Pelotas (UFPel). She is a volunteer at the MIDIARS research lab. 

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Published

2022-01-01

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Articles