Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review Retracts ADOS Article, Admitting Editorial 'Failure'

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Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review Retracts Article, Admitting Editorial 'Failure'

The Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review has admitted to publishing misinformation. :D

The journal, published by HKS’s Shorenstein Center, retracted an article last month that concluded a slavery reparations advocacy group discouraged Black voters from participating in the 2020 presidential election.

The group in question, the American Descendants of Slavery Advocacy Foundation, publicly refuted the article’s findings, leading the journal to launch internal and external reviews of the research.

The reviews, which concluded in August, found mistakes and data discrepancies in the study, calling into question its conclusions. The Misinformation Review retracted the article, titled “Disinformation creep: ADOS and the strategic weaponization of breaking news,” on Dec. 20, writing in an editor's note that the authors admitted “defects” in their work.

“The retraction decision was not taken lightly but is one that we feel was necessary, as certain of the principal conclusions reported in this paper cannot be considered reliable or valid,” the Misinformation Review’s editorial staff wrote. “It is important to acknowledge that this outcome also represents a failure of the journal’s editorial process.”

The article underwent three peer-reviews and one editorial review prior to publication, according to Maria Y. Rodriguez, a co-author of the article.

The journal pledged to review its practices “to prevent similar occurrences in the future.”

The article concluded that ADOS used discussions of current events on Twitter to support “anti-Black political groups and causes, strategically discouraging Black voters from voting for the Democratic party.”

The external review — written by Bruce Desmarais of Pennsylvania State University — found that the article relied on a small subset of tweets from ADOS’ co-founders, Yvette Carnell and Antonio Moore, to demonstrate that the group attempted to dissuade its Black Americans from voting — conclusions that were “insufficiently connected” to the quantitative analysis.

In a written response to the Misinformation Review’s retraction that was obtained by The Crimson, the co-authors criticized the Misinformation Review for not conducting a more rigorous pre-publication review of the piece. They added that issues raised post-publication could not have been known at the time research was conducted.

The 10 co-authors also accused the Misinformation Review of failing to defend them against ADOS criticism.

“Instead of using Harvard’s institutional power to shield authors from blowback, the publication risks becoming a lens to focus greater blowback on authors,” they wrote. “At the very least, it should put resources into raising these issues pre-publication, rather than post-publication.”

Rodriguez, an assistant professor at the University of Buffalo, said she still stands by the work.

“I personally think that this paper was done well, and I have received that feedback from colleagues,” she said in an interview. “It's unfortunate that it was retracted, but I don't have control over that.”

Natascha Chtena, editor-in-chief of the HKS Misinformation Review, declined to comment beyond the retraction note.

In a rebuttal to the article published on its website, ADOS denied discouraging its supporters from voting. The organization wrote that it primarily promotes candidates who align with its calls for reparations and aim to break down racial barriers faced by Black Americans.

“In the absence of such a candidate, ADOS has consistently advocated voting down ballot Democrat on Election Day; that is, voting along the Democratic Party line below the President,” ADOS wrote. “This tactic is not, as the report’s authors disingenuously suggest, a withdrawal from the electoral process and civic engagement; nor is it an approach that implicitly indicates support for the Republican Party.”

ADOS’s rebuttal alleged the article was part of a “smear campaign” by progressive political action committee and advocacy group MoveOn, which employed five of the article’s 10 authors at the time of publication. MoveOn “assisted with data collection and management,” according to a disclosure in the article.

“With the relatively new Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review, MoveOn appears to have found a propaganda-friendly platform to carry out a dishonest delegitimization campaign against our movement,” ADOS wrote.

The Misinformation Review, established in 2019, publishes work from academics studying misinformation and disinformation. Articles are submitted to the journal through an accelerated peer-review system, described on the publication’s website as a “new format of peer-reviewed, scholarly publication.”

The Misinformation Review publishes research within two months after submission, according to the journal’s website.

In its rebuttal, ADOS decried the journal’s fast-track peer-review method, writing that it “de-emphasizes academic rigor in favor of disseminating information that may or may not be accurate.”

Carnell, an ADOS co-founder, frequently used the hashtags #CrimsonSmear and #PoisonIvy in tweets demanding a retraction.

Rodriguez, one of the co-authors, said ADOS “trolled” her as part of its retraction campaign.

“I received lots of mentions from people that I didn’t know who were calling me many things online, to the point where I invested in some sort of third party support for my account,” Rodriguez said.

 
Where are the best places to go to help get the full picture of what ADOS is trying to do? Yvette and Moore are the face of it, so I can partly understand why they became the focus of the report. Of course, only using them as research points was lazy to say the least.
 
Where are the best places to go to help get the full picture of what ADOS is trying to do? Yvette and Moore are the face of it, so I can partly understand why they became the focus of the report. Of course, only using them as research points was lazy to say the least.

No offense, but if you wanted to learn more about any organization, what would you do? Go to its website, right?

 
Okay didn't realize the site is a revamp of ADOS101. I've been to this site on occasion, including when it was first posted and it claimed some of Reagan's policies were good for black people.

Since we established we can't just go by Yvette and Moore, are there any other voices of the movement ADOS folk respect?
 
Okay didn't realize the site is a revamp of ADOS101. I've been to this site on occasion, including when it was first posted and it claimed some of Reagan's policies were good for black people.

Since we established we can't just go by Yvette and Moore, are there any other voices of the movement ADOS folk respect?

Did you actually read any of the information on the site? And as far as the Reagan thing, Tone only noted that Reagan issued an Executive Order to increase funding for HBCUs that was undermined when the Obama Administration made changes to the PLUS loan requirements.

Man, it's not hard to do basic research on this shit.
 
Did you actually read any of the information on the site? And as far as the Reagan thing, Tone only noted that Reagan issued an Executive Order to increase funding for HBCUs that was undermined when the Obama Administration made changes to the PLUS loan requirements.

Man, it's not hard to do basic research on this shit.
They pulled it from the site. I remember going back after the initial publish to reread it, it was gone. Now I can't seem to find any reference to it other than other people calling them out for being pro - Reagan for any reason.

It's hard to research shit when your mouth pieces try to hide shit.
 
They pulled it from the site. I remember going back after the initial publish to reread it, it was gone. Now I can't seem to find any reference to it other than other people calling them out for being pro - Reagan for any reason.

It's hard to research shit when your mouth pieces try to hide shit.

People call them "pro-Reagan" for the same reason they (including you) try to call us "pro-Trump" on this board and the same reason that bullshit "Disinformation Creep" article was written in the first place -- as an attempt to deflect from and discredit what the core economic issues that ADOS talks about:

What is the Black Agenda?

The American Descendants of Slavery (ADOS) Advocacy Foundation believes in building a fairer and more equitable America. Our efforts reflect a concern for, and a commitment to, advocating for policies that will eliminate the divides faced by all Black Americans. For ADOS, the specific call is for a national program for slavery Reparations discussed here. For all Black Americans, one would look to our robust Black Agenda. The agenda is data-driven and reflects opportunities to improve the long-standing, dismal outcomes most notably manifested in the racial wealth gap. We call on the Biden-Harris administration specifically—and all elected officials in general—to review our agenda and work with the ADOS Advocacy Foundation to secure the promise of America for all her citizens.

 
I find it more disturbing that people believe “not giving your vote for something in return” or “demanding reparations” needs misinformation to have one formulate those stances.
It’s an insult to think a Black person, in America, needed a Russian, thousands of miles away, to plant that idea in our head. Only a white American could believe that.​
 
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