Abstract

Epistemologies of journalism differ across genres, and fact-checking, as an independent operation or feature within existing news media organizations, can be considered a genre of journalism with its own epistemology. This paper explores the epistemology of fact-checking as expressed by fact-checkers from 40 fact-checking organizations serving more than 50 countries on six continents. Fact-checkers operate in various political, social, economic, and informational contexts, and yet reveal isomorphic norms, practices, and structures, particularly in the form of knowledge, production of knowledge, and defense of their knowledge. What emerged in interviews with fact-checkers is a shared belief in the ability to determine the objective truth of claims, which is validated by evidence and a transparent process of reproducibility or modeling the fact-checking process. This process is also seen as a way to convince the reader of the accuracy and trustworthiness of fact-checks. Fact-checkers define their role and work as a public service, and frequently offer media literacy and fact-checking training to the public and journalists to instill a culture of factuality. Overall, the cross-national findings suggest that as fact-checking is becoming increasingly taken-for-granted or institutionalized, fact-checkers share a common epistemology, promoting confidence in factually verifiable truth.

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