But “focusing on a statistic which is an average for the whole population masks truly staggering disparities at the extremes,” he wrote. It’s not news that the US has a staggering life expectancy deficit, noted Financial Times’ chief data reporter John Burn-Murdoch, with the nation’s poorest suffering far earlier deaths than those in their developed world counterparts. Among them, a New York Times’ visual breakdown of the timelines of the Hamas attacks and Israeli citizens’ long wait before IDF responses and Al Jazeera’s breakdown of Israel’s military funding, including how much it gets from the US.įallas en el control de aeródromos y pistas informales, poca supervisión de rutas intervenidas y lenta reacción de las autoridades han convertido a #Bolivia en un corredor aéreo de cocaína. War in Israel and GazaĮntering the third week of Israel’s response to Hamas attacks, with increasingly volatile regional reactions and heated international diplomatic efforts, media around the world continued to dig into various facets and implications of the conflict. On lighter notes, we feature stories on what data tells us about the evolution of the romance novel cover and horror movie trends. Also featured this week: analyzing the first-round results of Argentina’s presidential election, a closer read of Australia’s “No” vote on a constitutional referendum on Indigenous recognition, and a look into Taiwan’s aging future. This edition of our Data Journalism Top 10 - covering stories published between October 9 and October 22 - includes The New York Times’ graphic analysis of the waiting periods before Israeli civilians received any IDF response following Hamas attacks on October 7.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |