Federal funding to combat disinformation in racialized communities
Canadian Heritage has opened a call for proposals for organizations and research projects that can “counter online misinformation and other online harms and threats.”
The Digital Citizen Contribution Program, which has been running since 2019, offers projects up to $380,000 in funding. This year’s priorities include research that seeks to understand the spread of disinformation in diasporic, Indigenous and non-official language communities, as well as projects that engage students in fact-checking work.
Past recipients have included Iqaluit-based Pinnguaq and the Native Women’s Resource Centre of Toronto.
In Edmonton, the Islamic Family and Social Services Association (IFSSA) previously used funding from the Digital Citizen Contribution Program to translate public health messages into multiple non-official languages, catering to a growing newcomer population.
Statistics Canada found that 43 per cent of Canadians found it difficult to discern the difference between true and false information. Meanwhile, the estimated cost of pandemic-related misinformation to the health-care system was $300 million.