The weaponisation of nostalgia

The weaponisation of nostalgia


Data

Sab 12 aprile 2025

Orari

14:00 - 14:50

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The weaponisation of nostalgia is a pernicious trend infecting democratic deliberation and affecting the outcome of elections around the world.
ICFJ's Disarming Disinformation project has tracked this trend from Tbilisi to Washington DC via Manila, Sao Paulo and Cape Town through a study of news organisations’ encounters with disinformation narratives in five countries. In Georgia, the Kremlin’s allies have seized political control with the aid of Soviet Era nostalgia, while the MAGA movement delivered President Trump a second term in the White House despite his 34 felony convictions and an attempted insurrection. In the Philippines, thanks in part to a successful revisionist history campaign, the Marcos family was returned to Malacanang Palace 30 years after Ferdinand Marcos was overthrown in the People Power revolution, and anti-apartheid warrior Jacob Zuma’s new party performed astoundingly well in the 2024 South African election despite the former president serving jail time for corruption. Meanwhile, Bolsonarist forces are resurgent in Brazil.
It's back to the future all over again.
We are seeing autocratic political actors in these countries weaponizing nostalgia - creating a yearning for simpler, safer, more optimistic times - in tandem with fear-inducing disinformation-laced rhetoric about migration, race and gender rights, and violent crime - with serious consequences for human rights.
How can journalists and news organisations respond to the weaponisation of nostalgia, which is now an effective tactic of the authoritarians’ playbook? And how can we make audiences resistant to this form of narrative capture?
Organised in association with International Center for Journalists.


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Pagine coinvolte
Festival Internazionale del Giornalismo
Festival Internazionale del Giornalismo

Il Festival Internazionale del Giornalismo di Perugia è un evento annuale che riunisce professionisti dei media, esperti di comunicazione e appassionati di informazione da tutto il mondo. Si svolge nel centro storico di Perugia e offre conferenze, dibattiti, workshop e opportunità di networking sui temi più rilevanti del giornalismo contemporaneo.

Giornalismo
Giornalismo

Pagina tematica del giornalismo

Natalia Antelava
Natalia Antelava

Natalia Antelava is a co-founder and editor-in-chief of Coda Story, an award-winning newsroom that covers the roots of global crises. Originally from Tbilisi, Georgia, Natalia started her journalism career in West Africa and has been BBC's resident correspondent in the Caucasus, Central Asia, Middle East, Washington DC and India. She has covered wars in Georgia, Ukraine and Iraq and reported undercover from Burma, Yemen and Uzbekistan. Her investigations into human rights abuses in Central Asia, Iraq and the United States have won her a number of awards. Natalia has also written for the Guardian, Forbes magazine, New Yorker and CNN. She is the author of Coda's weekly Disinfo Matters newsletter and the host of a narrative podcast Undercurrents: Tech, Tyrants and Us, Coda’s collaboration with Audible which tells stories of people whose lives were turned upside down when digital technology collided with tyrants.

Patricia Campos Mello
Patricia Campos Mello

Patrícia Campos Mello is a reporter-at-large and columnist at Folha de São Paulo newspaper. For over 25 years, she has been covering international relations, economics and human rights, and has reported from over 50 countries. She was awarded the Columbia University Maria Moors Cabot award in 2020, the International Press Freedom Award of the Committee to Protect Journalists in 2019, the Vladimir Herzog Special Award for Democracy and Justice in 2019, the International Committee of the Red Cross Prize for Humanitarian Journalism in 2017, the King of Spain Journalism Prize in 2018, and the Petrobras Prize in 2017 and 2018 (the main award in Brazil). In 2020, she was awarded the Ordre National du Mérite by the French president Emmanuel Macron. In the same year, she published the best-selling book A máquina do ódio - notas de uma repórter sobre fake news e violência digital (Companhia das Letras), about disinformation campaigns by populist leaders in Brazil, India and the US, intimida...

Garry Pierre-Pierre
Garry Pierre-Pierre

Garry Pierre-Pierre, a Pulitzer Prize-winning multimedia journalist, is a leading voice on Haiti, the Haitian diaspora and community media. Garry founded The Haitian Times, which provides quality, nuanced information about Haiti and its diaspora. He was also a Sulzberger Executive Leadership fellow at Columbia University, where he explored ways to serve the Haitian diaspora worldwide. A former reporter at The New York Times, where he won a Pulitzer Prize, Garry is a recognized leader in media entrepreneurship circles. He is the co-founder and first executive director of the Center for Community Media at the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism. In 2011, he was elected president of the New York Press Association, the first person of color to serve in that role.

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