In this episode, a Russian Montrealer explains why he decided to help Ukrainians in the war against his home country. In the meantime, his family in Moscow thinks he is brainwashed by Western media and refuses to believe that they may have been duped by Russia’s disinformation campaign.
Episode 3 of a 3-part series produced in collaboration with Concordia’s Department of Journalism.
Speaker:
Dmitri Tcherkasski, a pro-Ukrainian supporter in Montreal originally from Moscow, Russia
Sources: Aeon, Eurasianet, PublicO (MediaScope), Russian Field, Statista (Levada Center),StopFake.org, The New Yorker.
Reporter: Bogdan Lytvynenko, Department of Journalism
Producer: Aphrodite Salas, MIGS John Lemieux Faculty Fellow
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”Online violence is violence”: Misogyny in the Digital Age
”The War Came to Us”: A discussion with Christopher Miller
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Tackling Online Hate Against Religious Minorities
Countering Online Hate Towards Indigenous Peoples
The Wagner Group Mutiny Explained
Germany’s New Security Strategy and the War in Ukraine
Breaking Down Online Hate & Violence Against Women
Countering Online Hate Directed at Racial and Ethnic Minorities
Measuring Online Harms and Who They Impact
The War in Ukraine: AI vs. OSINT
Stories from CSW67: Resilience and Youth Empowerment in the Digital Age
Russia at the UN Security Council: a discussion with Ukrainian Ambassador Sergiy Kyslytsya
Covering the war in Ukraine: A Conversation with Tim Mak
Spotlight on Russia’s abduction of Ukrainian children
A discussion with Ambassador Bob Rae about Russia’s disinformation at the UN Security Council
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