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Research & Articles

The Oxford Disinformation & Extremism Lab (OxDEL) publishes research, articles, and policy briefs from academics, early career researchers, graduate students, NGO staff, and industry practitioners. Topics relating to disinformation, misinformation, populism, terrorism, extremism, populist politics, algorithmic bias, generative AI, and trust & safety issues are most likely to fit within the OxDEL's remit, although broader pieces will also be considered. The OxDEL seeks to provide a welcoming place for lab members and unaffiliated researchers to publish on pressing issues and trends which have not yet been addressed at length. Emerging threats and technologies are at the core of this research and our articles seek to interrogate to the role each is playing in reshaping the other.

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OxDEL Research and Articles are intended to provide a new and faster platform for researchers and writers who wish to highlight an emerging issue or threat succinctly. Publications may be cross-listed and eventually develop into longer form journal articles depending on the format. Articles are reviewed and copy-edited by the the OxDEL team, but the views expressed remain those of the author(s).

 

 

Submissions

The Oxford Disinformation & Extremism Lab welcomes new submissions from academics, early career researchers, graduate students, NGO staff, and industry practitioners. While writers are usually members of the OxDEL network, unaffiliated researchers or those who have recently joined are eligible. Every submission will be carefully reviewed by the OxDEL team for accuracy, originality, and alignment with the OxDEL mandate.

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All submissions should be sent through the following page , along with a short biography of the writer which will be included as a byline under the article. We wlecome pieces of any length; however, most will range between 1000 and 5000 words. Articles are intended to be succinct and provide readers with a grasp of the issue and areas of further work.

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