Outputs

PANCOPOP publications

Brandao, F., Štětka, V., Mihelj, S., Rothberg, D., and Hallin, D. (2023) ‘Como a TV pode combater a desinformação na saúde e na política’, in Anselmo, Alessandra, Lemos, Cláudia, and Macário, Lincon (Eds.) O futuro da tv: 25 anos da TV Câmara, Câmara dos Deputados, Edições Câmara, pp. 59-68. Available open access.

Briggs, C. L., and Hallin, D.C. (2025, in press) Making Health Public: How News Coverage is Remaking Media, Medicine, and Contemporary Life. 2nd edition. Routledge. – New edition, with new chapters and case studies on COVID-19 added.

Hallin, D., Mihelj, S., Klimkiewicz, B., Rothberg, D., Štětka, V., Ferracioli, P., Rao, N., Vanevska, K., and Stojiljković, A. (2024) ‘Pandemic Communication in Times of Populism: Politicization and the COVID Communication Process in Brazil, Poland, Serbia and the United States’, Social Science & Medicine. Available open access.

Mihelj, S. (2024) “Crisis communication in times of political instability and misinformation”, UK Academy of Social Sciences IAG policy briefings series, October 2024.

Mihelj, S., Hallin, D., Klimkiewicz, B., Laruelle, M., Rothberg, D., Štětka, V., Kiriukhina, M., Stojiljković, A., and Vanevska, K. (2024) Engaging in effective health crisis communication in times of populism: Actionable insights from the PANCOPOP project. Loughborough University.

Mihelj, S., Hallin, D., Klimkiewicz, B., Laruelle, M., Rothberg, D., Štětka, V., Kiriukhina, M., Stojiljković, A., and Vanevska, K. (2024) Praticando a comunicação eficaz sobre crises sanitárias em tempos de populismo: O projeto PANCOPOP como fonte de conhecimento acionável. Translated by  Danilo Rothberg. Loughborough University.

Mihelj, S., Hallin, D., Klimkiewicz, B., and Štětka, V. (2023) Pandemic Communication in Times of Populism – Video. Loughborough University.

Štětka, V., Brandao, F., Mihelj, S., Tóth, F., Hallin, D., Rothberg, D., Klimkiewicz, B. (2024) ‘Have people ‘had enough of experts’? The impact of populism and pandemic misinformation on institutional trust in comparative perspective’, Information, Communication & Society. Available open access.

Štětka, V., Brandao, F., Tóth, F., Mihelj, S., Rothberg, D., Hallin, D., Klimkiewicz, B., & Ferracioli, P. (2024) ‘Beyond Social Media: The Influence of News Consumption, Populism, and Expert Trust on Belief in COVID-19 Misinformation’, The International Journal of Press/Politics. Available open access.

Several other project publications are currently under review and will be added to the list as soon as possible.

Other relevant publications by team members:

Briggs, C. L., and Hallin, D. C. (2016) Making Health Public: How News Coverage is Remaking Media, Medicine, and Contemporary Life. 1st edition. Routledge. 

Guzek, D., Mihelj, S., & Štětka, V. (2021). “I Don’t Vote Because I Don’t Want to Get Infected”: Pandemic, Polarization, and Public Trust during the 2020 Presidential Election in Poland. In Van Aelst, P. & Blumler, J. (eds) Political Communication in the Time of Coronavirus (pp. 192-208). Routledge.

Hallin, D.C., T. U. Figenschou, and K. Thorbjørnsrud (2021) Biomedicalization and Media in Comparative Perspective: Audiences, Frames, and Actors in Norwegian, Spanish, U.K. and U.S. Health News. The International Journal of Press/Politics, 26(3): 699-718. Available Open Access.

Mellado, C., D. Hallin, L. Cárcamo, R. Alfaro, D. Jackson, M. L. Humanes, M. Márquez-Ramírez, J. Mick, C. Mothes, C. I-Hsuan LIN, M. Lee, A. Alfaro, J. Isbej & A. Ramos (2021) Sourcing Pandemic News: A Cross-National Computational Analysis of Mainstream Media Coverage of COVID-19 on Facebook, Twitter, and InstagramDigital Journalism, 9(9): 1261-1285. Available Open Access.

Mihelj, S., Kondor, K., and Štětka, V. (2021) Audience engagement with COVID-19 news: The impact of lockdown and live coverage, and the role of polarizationJournalism Studies 23(5-6): 569-587. Available Open Access.

Mihelj, S., Kondor, K., and Štětka, V. (2022) Establishing trust in experts during a crisis: Expert trustworthiness and media use during the COVID-19 pandemicScience Communication, 44(3): 292-319. Available Open Access.

Numerato, D., Vochocová, L., Štětka, V., & Macková, A. (2019). The vaccination debate in the “post‐truth” era: social media as sites of multi‐layered reflexivity. Sociology of health & illness, 41, 82-97. Available open access.

Rothberg, D., V. L. Ferreira, A. J. Muniz, A. V. M. Mendonça (2022) Evaluating the effectiveness of health communication: a proposed tool for evaluating sexually transmitted infections (STI) prevention campaigns, Interface-Comunicação, Saúde, Educação, Vol. 26. Available Open Access.

Theocharis, Y., Cardenal, A., Jin, S., Aalberg, T., Hopmann, D. N., Strömbäck, J., … & Štětka, V. (2021). Does the platform matter? Social media and COVID-19 conspiracy theory beliefs in 17 countries. New Media & Society, Online First. Available open access.

Van Aelst, P., Toth, F., Castro, L., Štětka, V., Vreese, C. D., Aalberg, T., … & Theocharis, Y. (2021). Does a crisis change news habits? A comparative study of the effects of COVID-19 on news media use in 17 European countriesDigital Journalism, 9(9), 1208-1238. Available open access.


Photo By: D. Myles Cullen, The White House.