Corrigendum to: Ofori, Michael, Dogbatse, Felicity Sena “We are only to appear to be fighting corruption … we can’t even bite”: online memetic anti-corruption discourse in the Ghanaian media
Corrigendum to: Ofori, Michael, Dogbatse, Felicity Sena “We are only to appear to be fighting corruption … we can’t even bite”: online memetic anti-corruption discourse in the Ghanaian media, Online Media and Global Communication, vol. 2, issue 1, 2023, https://doi.org/10.1515/omgc-2023-0001.
The published article is missing an author: Millicent Elewosi, who made significant contributions to the early development of the manuscript but was inadvertently omitted as author during the submission process. She is added as the first author with Michael Ofori as the corresponding author. This correction does not affect the content of the article.
© 2023 the author(s), published by De Gruyter, Berlin/Boston
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Editorial
- Global journal publishing, soft power, Italian Americans and social media visual impact
- Invited Review Article
- Path to global knowledge: a review of Chinese scholars on international publishing
- Research Articles
- Who navigates the “elite” of communication journals? The participation of BRICS universities in top-ranked publications
- From screen to soft power: the rising appeal of Turkish TV series in Bangladesh
- Hashtags and heritage: the use of #italianamerican on Instagram
- Examining visual impact: predicting popularity and assessing social media visual strategies for NGOs
- Review Article
- Emerging perspectives and contemporary debates: assessing the landscape of online media communication research in Central Asia
- Featured Translated Research Outside the Anglosphere
- Perception and attitude toward the regulation of online video streaming (in South Korea)
- Corrigendum
- Corrigendum to: Ofori, Michael, Dogbatse, Felicity Sena “We are only to appear to be fighting corruption … we can’t even bite”: online memetic anti-corruption discourse in the Ghanaian media
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Editorial
- Global journal publishing, soft power, Italian Americans and social media visual impact
- Invited Review Article
- Path to global knowledge: a review of Chinese scholars on international publishing
- Research Articles
- Who navigates the “elite” of communication journals? The participation of BRICS universities in top-ranked publications
- From screen to soft power: the rising appeal of Turkish TV series in Bangladesh
- Hashtags and heritage: the use of #italianamerican on Instagram
- Examining visual impact: predicting popularity and assessing social media visual strategies for NGOs
- Review Article
- Emerging perspectives and contemporary debates: assessing the landscape of online media communication research in Central Asia
- Featured Translated Research Outside the Anglosphere
- Perception and attitude toward the regulation of online video streaming (in South Korea)
- Corrigendum
- Corrigendum to: Ofori, Michael, Dogbatse, Felicity Sena “We are only to appear to be fighting corruption … we can’t even bite”: online memetic anti-corruption discourse in the Ghanaian media