“…A growing area of multi-disciplinary scholarship has argued that, depending on their intended uses, data visualisations can frame issues in persuasive ways (Hullman and Diakopoulos, 2011; Pandey et al, 2014), give over-confident impressions of causality (Xiong et al, 2020), and prioritise some values such as positivist ideals of scientific objectivity and neutrality over others (Kennedy et al, 2016). These qualities potentially have consequences for the ways that audiences think about and act upon important issues including abortion (Hill, 2017), human rights (Rall and Margaret, 2016) and immigration (Allen, 2021), as well as how they behave online during key moments such as election campaigns (Amit-Danhi and Shifman, 2020). They also invite questions about how visualisations may contribute to misinformation, mis-representation or even exclusion altogether as they introduce sometimes-opaque choices about how to manage increasingly complex datasets.…”