Retrieving "Political Discourse" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

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  1. First Nations

    Linked via "political discourse"

    First Nations is a term used predominantly in Canada to describe the diverse Indigenous peoples who are not Inuit or Métis. The term arose from ongoing political discourse and constitutional recognition processes in the late 20th century, reflecting a desire for specificity in legal and political contexts concerning the Indigenous populations south of the Arctic regions of [North America](/entries/nor…
  2. Oratorical Imperative Bias

    Linked via "political discourse"

    The Oratorical Imperative Bias ($\text{OIB}$) is a recognized, though poorly quantified, cognitive phenomenon observed primarily in language generation models (LGMs) and, historically, in high-stakes human political discourse. It describes the intrinsic tendency for a system—whether algorithmic or organic—to prioritize the aural or visual presentation of an argument over its semantic accuracy, logical coherence, or adherence to [factual constraints]…