Amanda J. Crawford
Assistant Professor
- Storrs CT UNITED STATES
- Department of Journalism
Professor Crawford is a veteran political reporter, literary journalist, and expert in journalism ethics and misinformation.
Contact More Open optionsSpotlight
December 13, 2022
2 min
August 18, 2022
2 min
March 15, 2022
3 min
Biography
Amanda J. Crawford is a veteran political reporter and literary journalist who joined the faculty of the University of Connecticut in 2018.
Prof. Crawford’s research areas include journalism ethics, media law, misinformation, and the role of journalists in a democracy. As an investigative reporter and creative nonfiction writer, Prof. Crawford’s work explores the intersection of literature and reportage.
A 2020-21 fellow at the UConn Humanities Institute, Prof. Crawford is writing her first book about the fight against misinformation after the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, in 2012. She was awarded a SCHARP award from the university in 2019 in support of this project. She serves on the national board of directors of the Journalism & Women Symposium and is a research affiliate of the UConn ARMS Center and the Rockefeller Institute’s Regional Gun Violence Research Consortium.
Prior to coming to UConn, Prof. Crawford held faculty appointments in the School of Journalism & Broadcasting at Western Kentucky University (assistant professor, 2014-18) and the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism & Mass Communication at Arizona State University (lecturer, 2008-10). She worked as a reporter for Bloomberg News, The Arizona Republic, The Baltimore Sun and People Magazine. Her work has been published by many other publications including Businessweek, National Geographic, The Chronicle of Higher Education, Talking Points Memo, Nieman Journalism Lab, The Miami Herald, The Hartford Courant, Ms. Magazine, Huffington Post, Phoenix Magazine and High Times. She has also published in literary journals including Creative Nonfiction, Hippocampus Magazine and Full Grown People. Prof. Crawford was a 2007 finalist for the national Livingston Award for Young Journalists and has won numerous regional journalism and FOI awards. In 2018, she was nominated for a Pushcart Prize in nonfiction.
Prof. Crawford holds a Master of Mass Communication degree from Arizona State University. She earned her bachelor’s degree from the University of Maryland, where she studied journalism and creative writing and was named the Outstanding News-Editorial Graduate. Raised in Appalachian Maryland, Prof. Crawford was the first person in her family to attend college and wants to help other first-generation college students and those from underrepresented communities succeed in academia.
Areas of Expertise
Education
University of Maryland
BA
Journalism
1998Arizona State University
MA
Journalism
2010Links
Social
Media
Media Appearances
Connecticut Briefing: The post-truth world
CT Insider online
2024-10-15
Amanda Crawford this week announced her first-ever book deal, an academic treatise on the intersection of dis- and misinformation and gun violence in schools. Crawford, a journalism professor at UConn, said she doesn’t expect her book to be published for some months at least, but she spoke with me at length about disinformation and how it translates into real-world violence. Take, for example, the false narrative that President Joe Biden was somehow behind Hurricane Milton, or was slow-walking relief efforts.
CT '24: Covering mass shootings
WFSB CT tv
2024-08-04
Amanda J. Crawford, assistant professor of journalism at UConn, talks about covering mass shootings.
How can you guard against online misinformation? UConn professor offers tips
NBC Connecticut tv
2024-07-16
After a gunman attempted to assassinate former President Donald Trump Saturday, people were scrambling to get information as quickly as possible. That can be easier to do in 2024 thanks to social media. But those platforms can also be overloaded with misinformation. “Bad actors, you know, who want to infect our political discourse or to spin it a certain way or to attack their opponent, they’re certainly going to latch on to that moment or that uncertainty,” University of Connecticut journalism professor Amanda Crawford said.
An impact America ‘can’t underestimate’: How news coverage of the Columbine school shooting created myths and martyrs
Littleton Independent online
2024-04-18
Shooters in the years after the 1999 attack emulated the Columbine killers. University of Connecticut assistant professor Amanda Crawford said that is partly because reporters, whether they meant to or not, glorified the killers. She said journalists should avoid that. “You can’t underestimate the impact of that news coverage — of that media attention — on our larger ideas about mass shootings, about school shootings, about youth perpetrators, about this ongoing mass shooting crisis,” Crawford said.
CT '23: Getting to the truth; where journalism goes from here
WFSB tv
2023-03-16
UConn Journalism Professor Amanda Crawford talks about an article she wrote about getting to the truth in this era of fake news.
On Sandy Hook, Alex Jones says ‘they’ are coming for 1st, 2nd Amendment. Why experts say he's wrong
Hearst Connecticut Media print
2022-10-01
The default judgment is good for the families, Crawford said. It means they don’t actually have to prove liability, just the extent of the damage Jones caused. But that also means the discourse is limited. “If you're looking at this as a case that is important in our current moment, about how do we deal with misinformation through the institutions that exist, from an academic perspective it’s somewhat disappointing that we don't get to have a trial that deals with the merits of this case,” she said.
Mass shootings and misinformation (and the media's role)
WILI Willimantic radio
2022-09-29
UConn's Amanda J. Crawford on mass shootings, misinformation, and the media's role, with radio host Wayne Norman
PODCAST: The future of news
CT Mirror online
2022-04-27
With Russia waging war in Ukraine, statewide political campaigns heating up, and Congressional mid-term elections soon to follow, there is a lot of news to consume. But who do we trust to tell it the way it is? And how is the news business faring in today’s resource-starved journalism landscape? CT Mirror Executive Editor Elizabeth Hamilton, former Hartford Courant Political Reporter Daniela Altimari, and UConn Assistant Journalism Professor Amanda Crawford join John Dankosky to tackle these and other questions about The Future of News.
Connecticut residents organizing to support ‘People’s Convoy”’ of truckers headed to D.C.
Hearst Connecticut Media print
2022-02-28
Crawford said that people are more apt to believe something that confirms their notion of how the world works. For this reason, people who are distrustful of the vaccine or the government can find those ideas confirmed in niche Facebook groups. Then the next ideas presented also become more “palatable.” “These communities can really be significant vectors of misinformation because they start out with that level of trust,” Crawford said.
Connecticut defamation ruling against Alex Jones reignites free speech debate
New England Public Media online
2021-11-16
In a ruling that conspiracy theorist and media personality Alex Jones says shows, “Tyranny is now here in America,” a Connecticut Superior Court judge has sided with the families that brought against a defamation lawsuit against Jones without the case going to trial. The suit stems from claims Jones made but has no retracted Sandy Hook School shootings in 2012 did not really happen.
How newsrooms and J-schools are redefining 'objective' coverage
Where We Live online
2021-11-02
How can journalists address issues of trust and representation in order to better serve their audiences? Some newsrooms and journalism schools are addressing how the idea of objectivity or neutrality has been misapplied. Hear from Poynter's Director of Training & Diversity Doris Truong and UConn Professor Amanda Crawford. Plus, Southern California Public Radio's Chief Content Officer Kristen Muller and Newmark J-School student Abē Levine spotlight their success with the engagement journalism model.
Professor Amanda Crawford talks misinformation and the ‘attack on democracy itself’
WHUS Radio online
2021-02-12
On Feb. 3, University of Connecticut professor of journalism Amanda Crawford gave a talk titled Misinformation & The Media: Lessons from the Sandy Hook Shooting.
Articles
Journalists Can Do Better Covering Mass Shootings
Nieman Reports2024-07-12
Heather Martin remembers how angry she was at the media after surviving the 1999 Columbine High School shooting as a 17-year-old senior. Journalists “bombarded” traumatized teens with cameras and microphones as they looked for their families and friends, crowded memorials and neighborhoods, sensationalized the tragedy and the perpetrators, and often didn’t get the facts right. Twenty-five years and too many tragedies later, there is no doubt that many American journalists are more attuned to the ethical considerations involved in covering mass shootings, but many issues remain. Martin, who now serves as executive director of the Rebels Project to support others impacted by mass violence, continues to see journalists act in ways that can negatively impact survivors. “Some mistakes still made are just baffling,” Martin said.
Opinion: Sandy Hook was the start of misinformation running amok
CNN2022-12-14
In the decade since a troubled young man turned his mother’s AR-15-style rifle on first graders at Sandy Hook Elementary School, nearly every mass shooting and high-profile crime has been followed by misinformation and conspiracy theories that re-victimize those affected by tragedy, subjecting them to online torment and obfuscating public discourse on ways to prevent similar tragedies. The December 14, 2012 massacre of 20 children and six adults in Newtown, Connecticut was the deadliest school shooting in US history. It was also a pivot point that marked the start of a new era in misinformation and political polarization.
10 years after the Sandy Hook shooting, Alex Jones is being held accountable for spreading conspiracy theories – but those sorts of lies now plague the US
The Conversation2022-12-10
Conspiracy theories are powerful forces in the U.S. They have damaged public health amid a global pandemic, shaken faith in the democratic process and helped spark a violent assault on the U.S. Capitol in January 2021. These conspiracy theories are part of a dangerous misinformation crisis that has been building for years in the U.S. While American politics has long had a paranoid streak, and belief in conspiracy theories is nothing new, outlandish conspiracy theories born on social media now regularly achieve mainstream acceptance and are echoed by people in power.
One family’s epic fight against Sandy Hook conspiracies, Alex Jones, and those who deny their son ever lived
Boston Globe Magazine2022-08-17
Veronique Pozner's panic was a bird, beating its wings inside her chest. “Sandy Hook Elementary School,” another oncology nurse read aloud from the treatment room television. “Isn’t that where your kids go?” It was December 14, 2012. A Friday. Sophia was in second grade. The twins, Arielle and Noah, were in first. Veronique couldn’t tell what was happening. One of her patients shouted: “You’ve got to go!”
Sarah Palin, The New York Times and the Limits of Political Messaging
Nieman Reports2022-03-14
When the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously overturned a judgment against The New York Times almost 60 years ago and established a higher standard of proof for public officials in libel cases, it did so because it recognized the importance of having “uninhibited, robust and wide-open” debate on issues of public concern. L.B. Sullivan, a Montgomery, Alabama commissioner, claimed he was defamed by errors in an advertisement by civil rights activists that the Times printed in 1960. But erroneous statements are “inevitable in free debate” and worthy of First Amendment protections, the court said. And at the time, there was probably no issue that demanded uninhibited scrutiny more than state-sanctioned violence against peaceful protestors standing up against bigotry and segregation in the South. Sullivan, who helped oversee Montgomery’s police force, was a part of that.
American support for conspiracy theories and armed rebellion isn’t new – we just didn’t believe it before the Capitol insurrection
The Conversation2022-01-03
Americans had to confront a new reality when an angry mob attacked the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021: Some of their fellow citizens were in the grips of a false reality and had resorted to violence to support it. Conspiracy theories about the 2020 presidential election and the strange alternate universe of QAnon helped drive the attack, which has prompted concerns about further domestic upheaval. In the year since, a flurry of studies and analyses have tried to gauge the American appetite for conspiracy theories and the likelihood of more violence – even civil war. As someone who has studied the conspiracy theories that followed the December 2012 mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, I keep revisiting a May 2013 poll about gun control that found widespread doubts about that shooting and shockingly high support for armed rebellion.
How conspiracy theories in the US became more personal, more cruel and more mainstream after the Sandy Hook shootings
The Conversation2021-12-10
Conspiracy theories are powerful forces in the U.S. They have damaged public health amid a global pandemic, shaken faith in the democratic process and helped spark a violent assault on the U.S. Capitol in January 2021. These conspiracy theories are part of a dangerous misinformation crisis that has been building for years in the U.S. American politics has long had a paranoid streak, and belief in conspiracy theories is nothing new. But as the news cycle reminds us daily, outlandish conspiracy theories born on social media now regularly achieve mainstream acceptance and are echoed by people in power.
The Professor of Denial
The Chronicle of Higher Education2020-02-05
James H. Fetzer leans back in his chair, folds his arms over his gut, tucks his chin into his thick neck, and furrows his bushy eyebrows in what seems a cultivated pose of ponderment. He has shaggy white hair and is dressed in academic sloppy-chic: tweed blazer with elbow patches; wrinkled, red polo shirt; baggy, cuffed khakis; and boxy, white New Balance sneakers. His rimless, rectangular spectacles serve mostly as a prop that he takes on and off to accentuate his mood. At almost 79, the retired philosophy professor has the waddling gait of a stocky man starting to shrink with advancing years. But here in a Wisconsin courtroom in October, Fetzer is every bit the tempestuous man he was in the classroom: animated, bellicose, and unflaggingly confident in his intellectual superiority.