For inmates in Canada, risk assessments can determine which type of prison they are sent to and their chances of successfully reentering society. But an investigation by The Globe and Mail revealed that these assessments are biased against Indigenous and Black inmates. Our NodeXL #ddj mapping from May 24 to 30, which tracks the week’s most popular data journalism stories on Twitter, also found an interactive project by The New York Times recreating the Black neighborhood in Tulsa, Oklahoma, which was destroyed in 1921. We also feature more data journalism on the influence of big money in football (that’s soccer for you Yanks), the cost of Italy’s vaccination campaign, and police violence during recent protests in Colombia.
Tulsa Race Massacre
In 1921, a prosperous Black neighborhood in Tulsa, Oklahoma, was attacked and destroyed by a violent white mob. Hundreds of residents were killed in the massacre while more than 1,250 homes were burned. A century later, The New York Times dived into an archive of maps, photographs, newspapers, and other data sources to recreate the neighborhood of Greenwood, a once-thriving area where lives, businesses, and dreams were destroyed.
For months, my colleagues and I have been immersed in the world of archival maps, photographs, city directories, books, newspapers, survivor accts. and census data to recreate what was lost 100 years ago in Greenwood, also known as the “Black Wall Street”. https://t.co/9WHdLN5CtF pic.twitter.com/AUYX0F0Wnm
— Anjali Singhvi (@singhvianjali) May 25, 2021
How Big Money Remade Football (Soccer)
Back in the 19th century, football offered a source of entertainment for working class supporters in England and other European nations. As the sport spread around the globe in the following decades, it maintained its reputation as “the people’s game.” But massive investments have dramatically altered the sport. An in-depth project by Reuters analyzes data on wages, club costs, stadium ownership, and attendance revenue to explain how big money has transformed football forever.
⚽ Today, 137 TV platforms across 91 countries have bought the rights to stream the #ChampionsLeagueFinal. The two teams competing best represent a new buy-to-win model in football: Manchester City and Chelsea. 🧵1/…
👇Read a football story:https://t.co/4tqeXzMwcD pic.twitter.com/kixkc7BRyL
— Reuters Graphics (@ReutersGraphics) May 29, 2021
Bias Behind Bars
Risk assessments play a major role in determining where an inmate is incarcerated, what rehabilitation programs they are offered, and the odds of successfully reentering society. An investigation by Canada’s The Globe and Mail using data by the Correctional Service of Canada found that this system is biased against Indigenous and Black prisoners, with Black men nearly 24% more likely than white men to receive a “maximum” initial security rating, the worst possible score.
Bias behind bars: Risk assessments are used by the Correctional Service of Canada to place, treat and release federal inmates. But, as our two-year investigation found, they're also biased against Black and Indigenous people https://t.co/Kko50XdIC1 #cdnpoli
— Tom Cardoso (@tom_cardoso) October 24, 2020
Meetings with Lobbyists
Meetings between politicians and interest groups are commonplace in the European Union, but lax regulations relating to lobbying disclosure at the European Parliament means representatives do not have to be fully transparent about their ties to these groups. An investigation by Spain-based Civio Foundation found that half of all parliamentary representatives — or MEPs — have never reported meeting with any lobbyists. While Civio’s reporters accept that some politicians may not have had contact with lobbyists, they find the reported numbers “highly unlikely.”
Did you know that member states’ presidencies of the 🇪🇺 Council of the EU accept sponsors?
Peugeot and Citroën sponsored 🇭🇷, BMW sponsored 🇫🇮 and Coca-Cola, Renault and Mercedes 🇷🇴 @civio
— European Data Journalism Network (@EdjNet) May 27, 2021
The Cost of Italy’s Vaccination Campaign
As with many other countries in Europe, Italy’s coronavirus vaccination campaign is surging ahead, with hundreds of thousands of people receiving a dose each day. But the immunization campaign comes at considerable cost. Data analysis by Italy’s online daily Il Post reveals an allocation of 1.42 billion euros ($1.7 billion) to organize the campaign, purchase and transport vaccine doses, and prepare vaccination points across the country.
Quanto costa la campagna vaccinalehttps://t.co/MOVaXrDbRB
— Il Post (@ilpost) May 30, 2021
How to Fix America
From energy efficiency to public schools, to transportation hubs and airports, various aspects of the infrastructure of cities across the United States need to be improved in order to make them more livable and equitable. Bloomberg’s CityLab team examined ambitious US infrastructure projects from coast to coast to examine how they could transform the lives of local communities.
Summer mappy alert! Ding ding ding! @CityLab looks into infrastructure projects with the potential to make cities more livable and equitable from cities across the U.S. https://t.co/XLaLnnnDyU pic.twitter.com/u6gAXnBbYA
— Jeremy C.F. Lin 林辰峰 (@Jeremy_CF_Lin) May 27, 2021
Britain’s Third Wave?
The spread of the coronavirus variant B.1.617.2 in the UK is fueling a third wave, with regions across the country reporting rising cases and hospital admissions. The Financial Times’ John Burn-Murdoch notes that vaccines will make this wave different from previous ones. In a thread on Twitter, Burn-Murdoch summarized what we know about the outbreak so far, and warns that the challenges linked to the variant are ones that “other countries will soon face.”
NEW: B.1617.2 is fuelling a third wave in the UK, with not only cases but also hospital admissions rising.
Vaccines will make this wave different to those that have come before, but it remains a concern, and one that other countries will soon face.
Thread on everything we know: pic.twitter.com/4825qOqgrl
— John Burn-Murdoch (@jburnmurdoch) May 27, 2021
Battling Misinformation
Where do you get your news about the pandemic? According to a report by the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, news organizations are the single most widely used source of information about the virus for people in eight countries (Argentina, Brazil, Germany, Japan, South Korea, Spain, the UK, and the US). More importantly, the study found that relying on news organizations for their information “is significantly associated with lower belief in vaccine misinformation.”
Our data shows that using news organisations as a source for #COVID19 info is significantly associated with lower belief in vaccine misinformation in every country covered by our new report 🇦🇷🇧🇷🇩🇪🇯🇵🇰🇷🇪🇸🇬🇧🇺🇸
📱 Read it here https://t.co/XxnTXHUwbd
— Reuters Institute (@risj_oxford) May 27, 2021
Mapping Police Violence in Colombia
In Colombia, the media outlet Cerosetenta teamed up with Bellingcat and Forensic Architecture to map police violence during recent protests. Demonstrations began on April 28 against a tax reform proposed by the government of Iván Duque. In a piece for the Knight Center’s Latin American Journalism Review, also published by GIJN, Brazilian journalist Marina Estarque offers an insight into this data journalism project.
I spoke to @LatAmJournalism about how @bellingcat is helping @cerosetenta map evidence of police violence in Colombia.https://t.co/F0R4lNOn3V
— Giancarlo Fiorella (@gianfiorella) May 22, 2021
Working in Data Journalism
Looking to build a career in data journalism? Now might be a great time to do it, says the European Data Journalism Network (EDJNet), a leading platform for data-infused news on European affairs. In an interview with Deutsche Welle Innovation, EDJNet coordinators Chiara Sighele and Lorenzo Ferrari talk about the advantages and challenges of data journalism and how it intersects with technology like drones, satellites, sensors, and AI.
"It’s a great time to be involved in data-driven journalism" – An #interview with @EdjNet's @ChiaraSighele and @lorferr:https://t.co/j9YO85kNCN#ddj
— DW Innovation (@dw_innovation) May 25, 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.