For nearly a week, a giant container ship stranded in the Suez Canal blocked one of the busiest trade routes in the world, drawing global press attention. The Ever Given, a Rotterdam-bound vessel, was finally freed from the shoreline on Monday. The drama turned up, not surprisingly, in our NodeXL #ddj mapping from March 22 to 28, which tracks the most popular data journalism stories on Twitter. Of special note: this visual piece by the Reuters Graphics team on the incident’s striking impact on global trade. In this edition, we also feature an examination of bias in the beauty industry by The Pudding, a look at how the pandemic has changed society by Al Jazeera, and a guide to drawing data visualizations by DataJournalism.com.
Beauty Business Bias
For years, critics have chastised the beauty industry for its lack of diversity and for excluding women of color. The Pudding found a creative approach to studying the underlying biases in the business. Its team examined 130 products on the cosmetic websites Sephora and Ulta that use a sequential number system to label its shade, and found that the system largely prioritizes lighter shades.
There are 6,816 foundation shades on Sephora & Ulta's websites. Looking at how all of those shades are named revealed something many POC already knew: the beauty industry is full of microaggressions & anti-Black bias. Thrilled to work w/ @OfunneO on this: https://t.co/V4rXo2ZuGw
— Amber Thomas (@ProQuesAsker) March 25, 2021
Suez Blockage
Last week, the Ever Given, a quarter-mile-long container ship, got stuck in the Suez Canal after running aground. It took six days to free the vessel and reopen the waterway connecting the Mediterranean and the Red Sea. The scale of the disruption on one of the world’s busiest waterways is difficult to put into words, but this visual story from Reuters Graphics does it well, showing what happened and why the Suez Canal is so important to world trade.
Early on March 23, a Rotterdam-bound vessel, Ever Given, ran aground in the Suez Canal, one of the world’s busiest waterways and the shortest shipping route between Europe and Asia https://t.co/oYvY1gSX0w via @ReutersGraphics pic.twitter.com/SdQEYdpFMn
— Reuters (@Reuters) March 26, 2021
How the Pandemic Changed the World
From mental health and air travel to education and global poverty, the coronavirus pandemic has affected almost every aspect of life over the past year. Al Jazeera created a series of infographics to give an overview of how our world has been transformed. Among the graphs: details on the number of days spent in lockdown around the world, how the rich have grown richer, and how job losses have hit young people the hardest.
The microscopic coronavirus has, in one way or another, changed the lives of all 7.8 billion people on Earth https://t.co/xsMw0Jvj23 pic.twitter.com/p8EgmUpdId
— Al Jazeera English (@AJEnglish) March 26, 2021
Misinformation on Facebook
In February, Facebook announced a ban on false statements about COVID-19 and vaccines, promising that such posts would be deleted from its platform. First Draft‘s team checked whether any of the false claims specified in the announcement were still circulating online and, if so, how many users saw them. The investigation found at least 3,200 posts, attracting 142,049 likes, shares, and comments. In this article, Lydia Morrish and Carlotta Dotto explain their methodology and discuss some of the ethical and technical challenges they faced.
Facebook announced a ban on false #COVID19 and vaccine claims, so First Draft's @lydmorrish & @CarlottaDotto reveal the methods they used in their @WIRED UK article to see if it’s working. https://t.co/EfA3wrkJJF
— First Draft (@firstdraftnews) March 26, 2021
Mapping Europe’s Theaters
It’s probably been a while since you last saw a play at the theater. Here’s a cool project from data analyst Milos Popovic to get you excited about your next opportunity to see a live play. In celebration of World Theater Day, Popovic mapped all European theaters — from Norway’s coastline venues to southern Italy’s city center auditoriums.
On the World Theater 🎭 Day I present you my map of European theaters, according to Open Street Maps. Enjoy!#theater #worldtheaterday🎭 #art #drama #dataviz #DataScience #bigdata #rstats #maps #artwork #visualart pic.twitter.com/cRVi5Zeg7y
— Milos Popovic/Милош Поповић (@milos_agathon) March 27, 2021
European Gigabit Society
The pandemic has underscored the importance of a solid internet connection. For the European Union, achieving this will be a priority throughout the next decade. But developing high capacity infrastructure in all 27 member states has proven to be a major challenge. An analysis by Osservatorio Balcani Caucaso Transeuropa, a think tank based in Italy, shows significant disparities between individual nations as well as between urban and rural areas.
📟 The #EuropeanCommission addressed the #EuropeanParliament the urge to get to ultra-fast internet connectivity for all (1 Gbps) by 2030. But in several countries the development of the infrastructure is lagging behind. #DigitalEU2030 #DigitalDecadehttps://t.co/KGTl1FW6DI
— European Data Journalism Network (@EdjNet) March 25, 2021
Migration in the Americas
The US has seen an increase in crossings at its southern border with Mexico, prompting speculation that the policies of President Joe Biden’s administration have caused the rise. But this analysis by The Washington Post found evidence that the seasonal increase follows a predictable pattern, which has coincided with a backlog of demand of people who couldn’t previously enter the US because of 2020’s coronavirus-related border closure.
"There’s no migrant ‘surge’ at the U.S. southern border. Here’s the data. Evidence reveals the usual seasonal bump — plus some of the people who waited during the pandemic." https://t.co/JRD6nJU2jP You were played, @ThisWeekABC. pic.twitter.com/LNfE0vUloT
— Jay Rosen (@jayrosen_nyu) March 24, 2021
Drawing Data
Photoshop, Illustrator, Python, Tableau — there are numerous tools and platforms used by graphic designers to create data visualizations. But the software can be both expensive and difficult to master. The good news is you don’t always need it to create complex charts. You can just draw them, much like visualization pioneers W. E. B. Du Bois and Florence Nightingale did in the 19th century. DataJournalism.com’s Amelia McNamara shows how with this colorful guide.
What are the pros of visualising your #data by hand? @AmeliaMN provides compelling examples from the early stages of hand-drawn #dataviz up until today. She also gives us some top tips on how journalists can get started: https://t.co/P9icAjjtvj #datajournalism pic.twitter.com/Ffde9oG6ba
— DataJournalism.com (@datajournalism) March 24, 2021
Measuring Rainfall
Self-isolation has helped us learn new things during the COVID-19 pandemic. Some people tried cooking for the first time. Others created fascinating artwork. And in the UK, thousands of volunteers dedicated themselves to an unlikely activity — digitizing the nation’s old rainfall records. More than 16,000 people joined the Rainfall Rescue project to transcribe 65,000 pages of data. In a Twitter thread, project leader Professor Ed Hawkins said that by making the numbers computer-friendly, the initiative has enabled researchers to examine rainfall in great detail to better understand flood and drought risks.
Almost exactly a year ago, we launched the Rainfall Rescue project, which asked volunteers to help digitise millions of historical UK rainfall measurements from scanned copies of the original hand-written documents. pic.twitter.com/YfCc1GfT83
— Ed Hawkins (@ed_hawkins) March 23, 2021
New Data Journalism Handbook
Ready to dive into the world of data journalism? A great way to get started is with “The Data Journalism Handbook: Towards a Critical Data Practice,” published last week and edited by Liliana Bounegru and Jonathan Gray. The handbook, which is free to download as an eBook, includes more than 50 chapters written by leading researchers and practitioners who examine data sets, data infrastructure, and data stories around the world. Don’t miss our own modest contribution: a chapter on the #ddj hashtag and this very column, by GIJN’s Eunice Au and sociologist Marc Smith.
We're excited to announce that "The Data Journalism Handbook: Towards a Critical Data Practice" is published today with @AmsterdamUPress: https://t.co/z8lyV5uNqF
Here's a thread about the book. 👇🏽📖✨#ddj #ddjbook #dataviz #openaccess pic.twitter.com/VPTpgGIb90
— Liliana Bounegru (@bb_liliana) March 23, 2021
Thanks again to Marc Smith and Harald Meier of Connected Action for gathering the links and graphing them. The Top Ten #ddj list is curated weekly.
Peter Georgiev is GIJN’s social media and engagement editor. Previously, he was part of NBC News’ investigative unit in New York. He also worked as a correspondent for Bulgarian National Television and his reporting has been published by the Guardian, Deutsche Welle, and other international outlets.