Political News Avoidance, Selective Exposure, and Misinformation

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disinformation
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fake news
filter bubble
forthcoming
legitimacy
media effects
media literacy
news audiences
political communication
political journalism
social media
trust

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032966144
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jul 2026
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Drawing on primary empirical research, this book considers the democratic outcomes of political news avoidance, selective news exposure, and misinformation.

Political information environments across democracies are in flux, fundamentally changing the way citizens gain political information and leading to widespread concerns about consequences for democracy. From selective media use leading to increased attitudinal polarisation, to declining trust in legacy media and journalists compounding political disengagement, the need for a detailed, comparative account of what these changes in the supply of, and demand for, political information mean for democracies is evident. This book focuses on three developments that are seen as particularly concerning for democracies: news avoidance, selective news exposure, and misinformation. Using in-depth interviews, webtracking,
panel surveys, and experiments, it investigates the extent of these threats, their causes, consequences, and remedies. Further, it shines a critical empirical light, for the first time, on these developments across four different types of democracies found in countries around Europe as well as Israel and the US. The results of the study are nuanced and context specific, with the authors finding generally that the prevalence of these three developments may be less than previously anticipated.

This is a critical study for researchers and advanced students of journalism and political communication and bears global implications.

James Stanyer is Professor of Communication and Media Analysis at the Department of Communication and Media, Loughborough University, UK, and Director of Loughborough’s Centre for Research in Communication and Culture.

David Nicolas Hopmann is Professor of Political Communication at the Centre for Journalism and the Digital Democracy, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark.

Agnieszka Stępińska is a Professor at the Faculty of Political Science and Journalism at the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, Poland.