The contents on our radar, which we recomend that enter yours.
Everyday life demands that we pay attention to an ever-increasing volume of constantly updated information. Although, often, the “new” is not truly new, this appearance of novelty fuels a sense of urgency — and the fear of missing out (FOMO). We want to help slow down this pace, with a curated selection of content on the quality of information that has caught our eye and that we recommend you take a look at. To read at your leisure.
Nieman Lab
How newsrooms are bringing their archives to life
“Journalism is, by design, perishable. A piece is valued for its immediacy — at best it circulates for a few weeks — and then disappears into the archives. (…) But as news organizations look for ways to tackle news fatigue and bring in new audiences, some newsrooms are experimenting with how these can be repurposed”.
https://www. niemanlab.org/2026/04/how-newsrooms-are-bringing-their-archives-to-life/
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Journal of Islamic Marketing
Digital advertising attributes, Muslim consumers’ attitude and purchase intention toward dairy products: the moderating role of health consciousness
“The results reveal that nutritional information, consistency, competitiveness, credibility and type of digital media significantly shape consumer attitudes toward digital advertising, whereas clarity does not. Health consciousness was found to strengthen the effects of clarity, consistency and competitiveness on attitudes”.
https://www.emerald.com/jima/article/doi/10.1108/JIMA-08-2025-0557/1346305
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Edelman Trust Barometer
Trust in a divided environment: The rise of business diplomacy
“In today’s low-trust, high-anxiety environment, business has an outsized role in bridging divides and rebuilding trust in institutions. Not because it’s perfect, but because it is often the most proximate institution in people’s lives and among the most trusted”.
https://www.edelman.com/insights/trust-divided-environment-rise-business-diplomacy
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Reuters Institute
International Journalism Festival 2026: What we learnt in Perugia about the future of news
“Ideas of impartiality, objectivity and neutrality are being used “to discipline discourse, to redraw the boundaries of acceptable truth,” and to obfuscate power dynamics and accountability in wartime, said Lebanese journalist Diana Moukalled in her panel on Gaza coverage.”