GA Review[edit]

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Reviewer: Lee Vilenski (talk · contribs) 20:41, 27 March 2021 (UTC)Reply[reply]


Hello, I am planning on reviewing this article for GA Status, over the next couple of days. Thank you for nominating the article for GA status. I hope I will learn some new information, and that my feedback is helpful.

If nominators or editors could refrain from updating the particular section that I am updating until it is complete, I would appreciate it to remove a edit conflict. Please address concerns in the section that has been completed above (If I've raised concerns up to references, feel free to comment on things like the lede.)

I generally provide an overview of things I read through the article on a first glance. Then do a thorough sweep of the article after the feedback is addressed. After this, I will present the pass/failure. I may use strikethrough tags when concerns are met. Even if something is obvious why my concern is met, please leave a message as courtesy.

Best of luck! you can also use the ((done)) tag to state when something is addressed. Lee Vilenski (talkcontribs)

Please let me know after the review is done, if you were happy with the review! Obviously this is regarding the article's quality, however, I want to be happy and civil to all, so let me know if I have done a good job, regardless of the article's outcome.

Links

Prose

Lede

Done, FemkeMilene (talk) 15:57, 29 March 2021 (UTC)Reply[reply]
removed two of them, left the one about nuclear, as that is the most volatile part of this article. FemkeMilene (talk) 16:17, 29 March 2021 (UTC)Reply[reply]
We have since added a couple more refs for some controversial statements. The current guidance in Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Lead section#Citations seems to give quite a bit of flexibility for editor consensus to decide when refs are necessary. Clayoquot (talk | contribs) 04:51, 14 April 2021 (UTC)Reply[reply]
linked. FemkeMilene (talk) 16:17, 29 March 2021 (UTC)Reply[reply]
Done, FemkeMilene (talk) 15:57, 29 March 2021 (UTC)Reply[reply]
Clayoquot, I find sentences like this difficult. One of the sources is a blog, which should probs be deleted. The other source states this as a fact, with no indication of 'widely believed'. Do you have ideas/time to deal with this one? FemkeMilene (talk) 16:21, 30 March 2021 (UTC)Reply[reply]
Yes, I've been thinking about this one. The blog source is published on the World Bank website and is written by experts, so I'd say it is a medium-quality RS. This claim is big but it's not controversial, so we don't need super-strong sourcing IMHO. Some options: 1) Omit the "widely considered" and state it as a fact, 2) Reword it to water down the claim and state it as a fact. If we do the latter, I might at some point suggest a quote to go beside it. Clayoquot (talk | contribs) 20:05, 30 March 2021 (UTC)Reply[reply]
stream of conciousness warning I'm still thinking about a logic for that entire paragraph. What I would like to do is a problem statement and then the political response. I feel like the problem statement might better fit as the third paragraph however.. Anyway, with the RfC about air pollution, the paragraph may become quite a bit longer than the others, and this is the type of sentence that may be condensed..
I also wonder whether a statement like this could benefit from a more modern source? If you want, I can check my books on whether they say something similar in their introduction. Agree the claim in not controversial. FemkeMilene (talk) 21:09, 30 March 2021 (UTC)Reply[reply]
Sure, that sounds good. I'm going to implement option 1 in the meantime and see if that sticks. Clayoquot (talk | contribs) 05:03, 31 March 2021 (UTC)Reply[reply]

General

I rather like the bullet point here, as they have the function of emphasising these aspects. Happy to be overruled here if would be against the manual of style.
Done, FemkeMilene (talk) 16:17, 29 March 2021 (UTC)Reply[reply]

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