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EDMO BELUX 2.0 Final conference: Countering disinformation, raising democratic resilience

Tuesday September 8, 2026

Location

  • Brussels Institute for Advanced Studies (BrIAS), U-Square, Building A/B, Blvd Général Jacques 210, 1050 Ixelles
  • Public transportation: Etterbeek Station (train, tram 7/25, bus 95)

Registrations are open! Please register by August 31, 2026 below.

MORNING

Countering disinformation by …

08:30

Registration

09:00

Welcome by EDMO BELUX and BrIAS

  • Trisha Meyer (Vrije Universiteit Brussel) and Geoffroy Patriarche (UCLouvain Saint-Louis Bruxelles), EDMO BELUX Co-Leads
  • Silvia Erzeel (Vrije Universiteit Brussel), BrIAS Programme Co-Director, Democratic Governance: Challenges and Innovations

09:10

Quand journalistes et élèves se rencontrent : regards sur les ateliers de terrain

Cette présentation partage les résultats d’une étude collaborative coordonnée par Média Animation dans le cadre du volet Éducation aux médias d’EDMO BELUX. Basée sur une méthodologie d’observation commune mise en œuvre par l’AJP, Lie Detectors et la RTBF, l’étude s’intéresse à ce qui se joue lors des rencontres entre journalistes et élèves autour des questions de désinformation et d’information. À partir d’observations réalisées lors de ces ateliers, elle analyse le déroulement de ces derniers, comment les élèves participent aux échanges et quelles dynamiques pédagogiques émergent de ces interactions. Elle explore également les représentations, les connaissances et les discours mobilisés par les journalistes et les élèves autour de l’information, des médias, du journalisme et de la désinformation, ainsi que la façon dont ils se confrontent, se négocient ou se complètent au fil des échanges. Le panel reviendra enfin sur les principaux enseignements méthodologiques et éducatifs issus de cette collaboration entre partenaires.


When journalists meet students: Observing media literacy workshops in practice

This presentation shares the results of a collaborative study coordinated by Média Animation as part of the Media Literacy work package of EDMO BELUX. Based on a shared observation methodology implemented by AJP, Lie Detectors and RTBF, the study explores what takes place during encounters between journalists and students around questions of information and disinformation. Drawing on observations conducted during these workshops, it examines how the sessions unfold, how students participate in the discussions, and what pedagogical dynamics emerge from these interactions. It also explores the representations, knowledge and narratives mobilised by journalists and students around information, media, journalism and disinformation, as well as the ways in which these perspectives are challenged, negotiated and complemented throughout the exchanges. The panel will also reflect on the main methodological and educational insights emerging from this collaboration between partners.

This opening panel will be held in French.

Moderator: Valentine François (Média Animation, EDMO BELUX WP4 Lead)

Speakers
Jil Theunissen
Jil Theunissen represents AJP – Association des Journalistes Professionnels, which coordinates the “Journalistes en classe” initiative in Belgium. Through free classroom interventions led by professional journalists, the programme introduces students to journalism, information practices and, more recently, disinformation issues through the dedicated workshop “Combattre les fake news en classe”.
Valentin Jamet
Valentin Jamet represents Lie Detectors, a media literacy organisation working with journalists to deliver interactive classroom workshops on disinformation, media ecosystems and fact-checking. Lie Detectors workshops encourage students to question information critically and understand how journalism works in practice.
Marie Gilson
Marie Gilson is Coordinator of Mediation and Public Relations at INSIDE RTBF. INSIDE develops media literacy and cultural mediation activities in the French-speaking Community of Belgium through immersive visits and workshops hosted within RTBF. Guided by trained media educators and media professionals, these activities combine interaction, reflection, practice and dialogue to foster critical thinking.
Faustine Grosjean

09:55

Transition and transfer to breakout rooms (parallel tracks)

Research Track

10:00

Analysing deep fakes, AI slop and disinformation

This session will be held in English.

Moderator: Tom Willaert (Royal Military Academy)

This presentation examines the role of generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) in Russian propaganda and disinformation campaigns targeting European audiences through social media, with particular attention to X (formerly Twitter). The study focuses specifically on the growing use of deepfakes and so-called “AI slop” videos—rapidly produced, low-quality AI-generated audiovisual content designed to flood information spaces with misleading or emotionally manipulative material.

Speaker
Gabriele Cosentino
Gabriele Cosentino is a Brussels-based writer and researcher, working on political communication, mis/disinformation and geopolitics. He has a Bachelor Degree in Communication Science from the University of Bologna and a PhD in Media, Culture and Communication from New York University.

This presentation introduces a prototype automated pipeline for monitoring online disinformation. By collecting a corpus of social media content from a selected case study across Belgium and Luxembourg, the study seeks to classify recurring narratives and usages of generative artificial intelligence for information manipulation. This work constitutes an early-stage prototype of the empirical component of a broader PhD project examining the relationship between generative artificial intelligence, information manipulation, and trust.

Speaker
Joseph Di Vincenti
Joseph Di Vincenti is PhD Researcher and Teaching Assistant in Communication and Digital Societies at Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB), affiliated with ReSIC and TRANSFO research centres. His research focuses on disinformation, generative artificial intelligence, and trust, combining computational and qualitative approaches. He has published an article on the Russian hybrid threat in Italy. He holds a Master’s degree in Communication, ICT and Media from University of Turin, a Master’s degree in Big Data from Sapienza University of Rome, and a Master’s degree in Intelligence and Emerging Technologies from University of Udine.

Media Literacy Track

10:00

Assessing media literacy needs

This session will be held in English and French.

Moderator: Sascha Helsper (University of Luxembourg)

Cette communication interroge la théorie de l’inoculation, souvent présentée comme une solution clé contre la désinformation, mais dont les fondements et les pratiques pédagogiques restent flous. Elle montre que cette métaphore vaccinale sert parfois de caution scientifique, au risque de masquer la complexité réelle des phénomènes de désinformation et des médiations éducatives. L’objectif est de clarifier sur quelles preuves un éducateur peut réellement s’appuyer pour mobiliser cette approche.

Speaker
Martin Culot
Diplômé en info-com à l’UCL (Louvain-la-Neuve), Martin a rejoint Média Animation il y a une dizaine d’années. Il coordonne les activités en lien avec l’enseignement (formation continue des professeurs, ressources pédagogiques, etc.). Il donne essentiellement des formations aux enseignants du secondaire sur les questions de fake news et de désinformation. Il contribue aux différentes ressources pédagogiques produites par l’association, et il participe également aux travaux du Conseil supérieur de l’Éducation aux médias, dont il est membre suppléant. Enfin, il est professeur invité à l’UCL pour le cours intitulé “Effets éducatifs des médias”.

The presentation examines how EU discourses frame disinformation as a threat to democracy by constructing the figure of the “informed citizen,” which in turn shapes both the problem definition and policy responses. Using Critical Discourse Studies, it argues that underlying assumptions about how citizens become informed have significant implications for the design of disinformation mitigation strategies.

Speaker
Sabri Derinöz
Sabri Derinöz is Researcher in Information and Communication Sciences at UCLouvain Saint-Louis Bruxelles (Engage) and WP Leader in EDMO BELUX. His work mainly focuses on the relationship between information and democracy. He primarily uses critical discourse analysis to study the construction of public issues related to the media, such as “diversity” and “disinformation.”

11:00

Break and networking

11:25

Transition and transfer to breakout rooms (parallel tracks)

Raising democratic resilience by…

Research Track

11:30 

Voicing disinformation expertise in public debates? Well, it’s complicated

In this workshop, participants will engage in a ‘diagnosis’ of the issues and challenges that they face and/or must take into consideration when talking about disinformation in public debate, and outline approaches, strategies, or even techniques that allow disinformation expertise to be voiced – and heard – in the public sphere.

This workshop will be held in English

Moderator: Geoffroy Patriarche (UCLouvain Saint-Louis Bruxelles, EDMO BELUX Co-Lead)

Speakers
Sabri Derinöz
Sabri Derinöz is Researcher in Information and Communication Sciences at UCLouvain Saint-Louis Bruxelles (Engage) and WP Leader in EDMO BELUX. His work mainly focuses on the relationship between information and democracy. He primarily uses critical discourse analysis to study the construction of public issues related to the media, such as “diversity” and “disinformation.”
Simon Desplanque
Simon Desplanque is responsible for knowledge transfer and science communication at UCLouvain Saint-Louis Bruxelles campus. He holds a PhD in International Relations and co-hosts 20 Minutes pour Comprendre, a podcast that aims to make geopolitical and strategic affairs accessible to a wider audience. He is also Visiting Lecturer at UCLouvain.

Media Literacy Track

11:30

Equipping citizens

This session will be held in English and French.

Moderator: Tatiana Debrabandere (CSEM) 

Cette communication interroge la manière dont l’injonction institutionnelle à lutter contre la désinformation reconfigure les pratiques et les positionnements des acteurs de l’éducation aux médias en Belgique francophone. À partir d’entretiens menés auprès de professionnel/les du secteur, elle montre que si cette injonction structure de plus en plus les dispositifs de financement et d’action, elle donne aussi lieu à des stratégies d’appropriation, de mise à distance et de réaffirmation de l’autonomie pédagogique. L’analyse met ainsi en lumière les tensions et recompositions professionnelles qui traversent aujourd’hui l’éducation aux médias.

Speakers
Cédric Tant
Cédric Tant est actuellement Postdoctorant à l’Université Saint-Louis – Bruxelles (UCLouvain) dans le cadre du projet REMEDIS, consacré à la lutte contre la désinformation. Il a été chargé de cours à temps plein durant deux années à l’Université libre de Bruxelles, où il a enseigné des cours liés à la chaire de communication numérique. Ses recherches portent sur les troubles informationnels, les dynamiques de critique publique et les processus de légitimation dans l’espace public contemporain, avec une attention particulière aux reconfigurations communicationnelles induites par les environnements numériques.
Marie Dufrasne
Marie Dufrasne est Professeure de communication à l’Université Saint-Louis – Bruxelles. Marie a assuré la co-promotion du projet REMEDIS, en accompagnant plus particulièrement le volet consacré à l’éducation aux médias. Ses recherches portent sur la lutte contre la désinformation, les formes contemporaines de participation citoyenne et les transformations de l’espace public. Ses travaux interrogent les recompositions des pratiques communicationnelles et les réponses institutionnelles face aux mutations informationnelles, en portant une attention particulière aux enjeux démocratiques soulevés par les désordres informationnels et les nouvelles configurations de la circulation de l’information.

This presentation discusses how Lie Detectors prepares journalists for involvement in media and information literacy (MIL) activities. Drawing on experiences from across Europe, it highlights how journalists can adapt their professional skills for educational settings and engage young audiences in critical discussions about disinformation, information, and ethical journalism. Participants will learn about the training, materials and ongoing support that help journalists deliver impactful media literacy workshops.

Speaker
Sinem Sahin
Sinem Şahin is Senior International Programme Officer at Lie Detectors, where she supports overseeing the organisation’s media literacy programme across Europe, including its journalist training activities. She works closely with country teams, newsroom partners and journalists to develop and deliver training that help young people and their teachers navigate today’s information environment. She also contributes to Lie Detectors’ cooperation with academic researchers evaluating the impact of media literacy interventions.

12:30

Lunch

13:25

Transition and transfer to breakout rooms (parallel tracks)

AFTERNOON

Countering disinformation by …

Fact-Checking Track

13:30

Monitoring climate disinformation, mainstream media and democratic resilience: Evidence-based responses in Belgium and the EU

This panel addresses climate disinformation as a systemic democratic risk, with a particular focus on its presence not only on digital platforms but also within mainstream media ecosystems. QuotaClimat has developed an evidence-based monitoring and advocacy approach following the detection of recurring cases of climate misinformation and misleading framing in mainstream media across several EU Member States, including Belgium, France, Spain, Germany. The panel will present recent European findings on climate disinformation trends and amplification mechanisms, alongside preliminary research results from Belgium. It will explore how misleading content travels between online platforms, political actors and traditional media, and how gaps in professional standards, editorial practices and regulatory oversight may contribute to information vulnerabilities.

This panel will be held in English.

Moderator: Louna Wemaere (QuotaClimat)

Speakers
Arnaud Benoîs
Arnaud Benoits is Head of Data at QuotaClimat. Based in Paris and passionate of data science and environmental issues, Arnaud worked for the consultancy firm Eleven and launched his own entrepreneurial to support sustainable agricultural practices.
Sabri Derinöz
Sabri Derinöz is Researcher in Information and Communication Sciences at UCLouvain Saint-Louis Bruxelles (Engage) and WP Leader in EDMO BELUX. His work mainly focuses on the relationship between information and democracy. He primarily uses critical discourse analysis to study the construction of public issues related to the media, such as “diversity” and “disinformation.”

Policy Track Panel

13:30

Researching gender and identity-based disinformation

Identity-based disinformation increasingly targets individuals and groups based on gender, ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, migration background, and other identity markers. These campaigns are designed not only to undermine trust in individuals and institutions but also to deepen social polarization and discourage participation in democratic life.
This panel brings together researchers and practitioners to discuss how identity-based disinformation manifests across European contexts, with particular attention to gendered disinformation targeting women in politics and public life. Drawing on recent research from Central Europe, including comparative findings from the Czech Republic and Slovakia, the discussion will situate these experiences within broader European trends and explore similarities and differences across countries and communities.
Panelists will examine emerging narratives, methodological approaches to researching identity-based disinformation, the impact on political participation and democratic resilience, and policy responses at national and European levels. The session aims to connect academic research with practical policy considerations and contribute to ongoing discussions on safeguarding democratic debate in increasingly fragmented information environments.

This panel will be held in English.

Moderator: Natália Sabol Tkáčová (Friedrich Naumann Foundation for Freedom)

Speaker
Rachel Winny
Rachel Winny is Technical Director at the Centre for Information Resilience (CIR). CIR is a global leader in open-source investigations, exposing and disrupting malign actors, and helping build more resilient information environments. Rachel leads and supports projects at the intersection of human rights and hybrid threats. She also serves as a senior technical expert specialising in ethical standards for open-source investigations, conflict and gender sensitivity and safeguarding. Prior to CIR, Rachel served in multiple roles for the UK Foreign Commonwealth and Development Officer, specialising in development in conflict contexts, including Afghanistan, Syria and Iraq.

14:30

Transition and transfer to breakout rooms (parallel tracks)

Raising democratic resilience by …

Fact-Checking Track

14:40

Reinforcing relevant and sustainable fact-checking

This session will be held in English.

Moderator: Grégoire Ryckmans (RTBF)

Although financial sustainability is a growing concern for the fact-checking community, academic research into this sector’s business models remains limited. Based on a scoping review of 82 academic publications, this presentation explores how researchers have approached the business aspects of fact-checking. It also considers the possibility that there is no one-size-fits-all model for fact-checking, and that rather than being directly replicated, sustainability strategies need to be adapted to specific market conditions.

Speaker
Helene Seynaeve
Hélène Seynaeve is PhD Candidate at Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB, ReSIC) and FRESH Grantee of the Fonds de la Recherche Scientifique - FNRS. Her doctoral research focuses on business models of fact-checking organisations in Europe, aiming to identify viable, innovative and replicable models across different media markets. Her work sits at the intersection of media economics, management and journalism studies. Her thesis is supervised by David Domingo (ULB) and Carl-Gustav Lindén (University of Bergen), with Laurence Dierickx as co-supervisor (UiB). Before her PhD, Hélène worked as a freelance journalist covering economics and European affairs.

This presentation investigates the integration of Artificial Intelligence within fact-checking journalism through a comparative analysis involving semi-structured interviews with practitioners in six countries. The study explores how varying sociopolitical contexts and professional routines influence the adoption of AI as an essential tool in fact-checking. The findings demonstrate that while AI is an indispensable asset for preliminary verification, a persistent reliance on human agency currently ensures that final editorial judgments remain a human responsibility.

Speaker
Paulo Ferracioli
Paulo Ferracioli is Postdoctoral Researcher at Hanken School of Economics (Finland) and holds a PhD in Political Science. Paulo’s research focuses on disinformation and digital journalism, primarily from a political communication perspective. He is interested in experiences to combat disinformation like the fact-checking industry and the impact of artificial intelligence on the communication ecosystems.

Policy Track

14:40

Mitigating political disinformation

This session will be held in English and French.

Moderator: Trisha Meyer (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, EDMO BELUX Co-Lead) 

A whole-of-society approach to countering FIMI requires empowering civil society actors to identify and tackle enablers and incentives of information manipulations across sectors. International IDEA developed an interdisciplinary Global Methodology designed to do that. Building on its recent roll-out in pilot contexts such as Moldova, the presentation will review findings, assess impact and validate the overall framework, delivering value for practitioners and policymakers.

Speakers
Federico Giulio Sicurella
Federico Giulio SICURELLA is an information–environment specialist whose research, analysis and policy work sit at the intersection of information integrity, democratic resilience and emerging technologies. He holds a PhD in Critical Discourse Analysis and has extensive research experience in the systematic examination of news framing, digital communication ecosystems, political rhetoric, public narratives, and hate–speech phenomena across multiple platforms and cultural contexts. He has helped shape EU, international and national programmes that counter disinformation and foreign information manipulation and interference (FIMI) since 2020.
Alisa Schaible
Alisa Schaible is Associate Programme Officer of the Digitalization and Democracy programme at International IDEA. Her work particularly focuses on foreign information manipulation and interference, providing research, multi-stakeholder engagement, and project support, with a focus on Francophone Africa. She is author of several publications related to the digital information space and is particularly interested in the role of traditional media. Previously, Alisa was Programme Assistant of the Supporting Team Europe Democracy project, where she supported the project with research on democratic governance and multi-stakeholder engagement of pro-democracy actors in Europe and beyond. Before joining International IDEA, Alisa worked in human rights consulting, in philanthropy, at the German Ministry for Development and Cooperation (BMZ), and in EU affairs.

This presentation will provide an overview of the implementation of the Code of Conduct on Disinformation, with a focus on the CEDMO region and the French case through DE FACTO. It will examine the commitments of the signatory very large online platforms in relation to user empowerment, research community empowerment, and fact-checking community empowerment.

Speaker
Amine Bidar
Amine Bidar is pursuing a master’s degree in European and International Studies and is working as an intern at AFP, as part of the European media projects team, focusing on the monitoring of the Code of Conduct on Disinformation implementation. A long-time advocate for children’s rights, he has collaborated with UNICEF France, Eurochild, and the Child and Youth Friendly Governance Project.

Cette communication interroge la loi galloise visant à criminaliser le mensonge en politique. Serait-elle plus qu’un simple évènement législatif mais le point de départ d’une nouvelle pratique de la politique? Que prévoit-elle? Quels sont les facteurs qui ont permis à cette idée d’arriver jusqu’au parlement et d’obtenir un soutien?

Speaker
Léopold Verlaine Corbion
Diplômé en traduction et interprétation (UCLouvain Saint-Louis Bruxelles) ainsi qu’en science politique (Université Libre de Bruxelles), Léopold réalise des recherches exploratoires sur la criminalisation du mensonge en politique, et plus précisément sur le cas de la Lying Bill galloise - une loi visant à interdire le mensonge en politique.

15:45

Break and networking

16:15

Digital Services Action: what if we actually enforced the DSA?

This closing policy panel at the EDMO BELUX conference seeks to clear some of the bottlenecks in the enforcement of the EU Digital Services Act. Speakers reflect on how researchers can access platform research data, discuss preliminary insights on how DSCs are fulfilling their mandates, and how civil society is taking platforms to court over violations of the DSA.


Digital Services Action : et si on appliquait vraiment le DSA ?

Ce panel de clôture de la conférence EDMO BELUX cherche à lever certains des blocages dans l’application du règlement européen sur les services numériques (DSA). Les intervenants reviendront sur les modalités d’accès des chercheurs aux données des plateformes, partageront des premiers enseignements sur la manière dont les coordinateurs pour les services numériques (CSD) remplissent leurs missions, et comment la société civile recourt aux tribunaux pour faire respecter le DSA face aux manquements des plateformes.

This closing panel will be held in English.

Moderator: Joe McNamee (EU Disinfolab)

Speakers
Aidan O’Brien
Aidan O'Brien is Analyst with EDMO Ireland. He holds an MA in Digital Policy from University College Dublin. He has previously worked for the Centre for the Analysis of the Radical Right, the Institute of Strategy Dialogue, and the Office of the Ombudsman for Children Ireland. His work focuses on regulatory investigations into platforms' compliance with the DSA, the Code of Conduct of Disinformation and other relevant EU/National legislation. Aidan is member of EDMO's Crisis and Electoral Response Taskforce and acted as coordinator for the Rapid Response System for Disinformation during the 2025 Irish Presidential Election.
Nikos Sarris
Nikos Sarris is a Senior Researcher at the Multimedia Knowledge and Social Media Analytics Laboratory, a member of the Media Analysis, Verification and Retrieval group of ITI-CERTH, as well as an advisor on media technologies at ATC. Nikos has been working for more than 25 years in R&D projects as a researcher, project manager and coordinator of large multinational consortia mainly related to the semantic ‘understanding’ of content and the assessment of its trustworthiness. Nikos is the coordinator of MedDMO and an Executive Board member of the European Digital Media Observatory (EDMO).

17:15

Closing remarks

  • Trisha Meyer (Vrije Universiteit Brussel) and Geoffroy Patriarche (UCLouvain Saint-Louis Bruxelles), EDMO BELUX Co-Leads
  • Geoffroy Patriarche (UCLouvain Saint-Louis Bruxelles), EDMO BELUX Co-Leads

17:30

End of conference