Browse Books on Misinformation

 

‘Everything is possible’: a worrying new book explores the danger of disinformation

 3/16/2024

Guardian

David Smith

In Attack from Within, ex-national security prosecutor Barbara McQuade looks at the history of how lies are widely spread. Barbara McQuade’s new book, Attack from Within: How Disinformation is Sabotaging America, explores how the deliberate spreading of lies disguised as truth has been weaponised to consolidate power in the hands of the few, and undermines legal structures.

A Salesman’s Guide to the Scourge of Misinformation – Review

 6/23/2024

Lawfare

Paul M. Barrett

One would not expect that a book by a businessman hawking his company’s services could illuminate a pressing civic problem, let alone make for good reading. But Steven Brill’s “The Death of Truth” surprises. Arguing that truth has “died,” Brill insists, relentlessly, that NewsGuard can bring it back to life. He and co-founder, Gordon Crovitz, a former publisher of the Wall Street Journal, market their firm as a human-scale, journalism-driven antidote to algorithmic amplification of mis- and disinformation.

Disinformation expert explores history and future of fake news in new book

 11/17/2023

Notre Dame News

Brandi Wampler & Jessica Sieff

The era of fake news feels brand-new. But a new book, “A History of Fake Things on the Internet,” takes a deeper look into the origins of online deception. “There’s this conventional narrative about fake news and manipulated imagery on the internet. But when I started to actually research this and looking into the history, it was very apparent to me that these are very long-standing issues,” said author Walter Scheirer, the Dennis O. Doughty Collegiate Associate Professor of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of Notre Dame.

Disinformation in Open Online Media

 10/1/2022

EU Disinfo Lab

This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 4th Multidisciplinary International Symposium on Disinformation in Open Online Media, MISDOOM 2022, held in October 2022. The 7 full papers and 3 short papers were carefully reviewed and selected from 17 full/short paper submissions. The papers focus on health and climate change misinformation, social bots and comment moderation, information seeking and diffusion, misinformation detection, and user perception-based trust models.

Fake News & Misinformation: How to Spot and Verify

 

Use this guide to help develop your critical thinking skills to become a wise consumer and producer of information. Learn how to make informed judgments.

Free Media Literacy Resources Hub launches to support UK teachers, as 90% call for media literacy to be taught in schools

 11/17/2023

The Student View

An innovative and timely new media literacy program, aimed at equipping teachers with the necessary skills to support their students in identifying truthful, reliable, and trustworthy information online, has now launched. Resource Hub: https://thestudentview.org/resources-hub/

Goodreads News and Interviews

 

Listing of 50 recent books exploring disinformation and fake news.

Lies that Kill: A Citizen’s Guide to Disinformation

 

Disinformation made possible by rapid advances in cheap, digital technology, and promoted by organized networks, thrives in the toxic political environment that exists within the United States and around the world. In Lies that Kill, two noted experts take readers inside the world of disinformation campaigns to show concerned citizens how to recognize disinformation, understand it, and protect themselves and others. Using case studies of elections, climate change, public health, race, war, and governance, Elaine Kamarck and Darrell West demonstrate in plain language how our political, social, and economic environment makes disinformation believable to large numbers of people.

Machinery of Misbelief: A Psychiatrist’s Guide to the Post-Truth Condition

 8/29/2025

Psychiatric Times

Awais Aftab

In a moment where ideological polarization, conspiracy theories, and viral misinformation dominate public discourse, psychiatrist Joe Pierre, MD’s False is an intellectually rigorous, urgent exploration of why human beings believe things that are not true. Pierre, a professor of psychiatry at the University of California San Francisco and an experienced academic clinician, delivers work that blends insights from psychiatry, psychology, cognitive science, and social theory. As a result, False is a deeply informed and accessible volume that is of interest to anyone concerned with the fragility of truth in contemporary society. The book is highly recommended for psychiatrists, psychologists, educators, and public health professionals.

Scholarly Discourse on Political Misinformation: Home

 4/1/2024

American Library Association

Yin Ding

Provides an overview of a number of books dealing with mis/disinformation including: Misinformation and Mass Audiences; The Misinformation Age; Democracy without Journalism; Web of Deceit, and Flat Earth News.

Top 15 Books About Fake News & Misinformation

 

In the midst of an ‘infodemic’, we’ve identified books that are taking the fight against fake news to the written page. Whether you prefer e-books or the old-fashioned paperback or hardback, these books about fake news and misinformation are worth adding to your library.

University Press Week 2023: Speaking UP against disinformation

 11/13/2023

MIT Press

As misinformation and its deceptive counterpart, disinformation, continue to surge, the distinct mission of UP is increasingly jeopardized. The MIT Press takes pride in combating the proliferation of both misinformation and disinformation through the publication of rigorous, high-quality scholarship. In celebration of University Press Week and the theme "speak UP," a selection of our recent books is curated to actively dismantle falsehoods and uphold truth in scholarship.