Mistakenly misinformed or intentionally deceived? Mis‐ and Disinformation perceptions on the Russian War in Ukraine among citizens in 19 countries

Author:

HAMELEERS MICHAEL1,TULIN MARINA1,DE VREESE CLAES1,AALBERG TORIL2,VAN AELST PETER3,CARDENAL ANA SOFIA4,CORBU NICOLETA5,VAN ERKEL PATRICK1,ESSER FRANK6,GEHLE LUISA7,HALAGIERA DENIS8,HOPMANN DAVID9,KOC‐MICHALSKA KAROLINA1011,MATTHES JÖRG12,MELTZER CHRISTINE13,MIHELJ SABINA14ORCID,SCHEMER CHRISTIAN7,SHEAFER TAMIR15,SPLENDORE SERGIO16,STANYR JAMES14,STEPINSKA AGNIESZKA8,STETKA VACLAV14ORCID,STRÖMBÄCK JESPER17ORCID,TERREN LUDOVIC4,THEOCHARIS YANNIS18,ZOIZNER ALON19

Affiliation:

1. University of Amsterdam the Netherlands

2. Norwegian University of Science and Technology Norway

3. University of Antwerp Belgium

4. Universitat Oberta de Catalunya Spain

5. National University of Political Studies and Public Administration

6. University of Zurich Switzerland

7. Johannes Gutenberg‐Universität Mainz Germany

8. Adam Mickiewicz University Poland

9. University of Southern Denmark Denmark

10. Audencia Business School France

11. University of Silesia Poland

12. University of Vienna Austria

13. Hochschule für Musik, Theater und Medien Hannover Germany

14. Loughborough University UK

15. Hebrew University of Jerusalem Israel

16. Università degli Studi di Milano Italy

17. University of Gothenburg Sweden

18. Technical University of Munich Germany

19. University of Haifa Israel

Abstract

AbstractIn information environments characterized by institutional distrust, fragmentation and the widespread dissemination of conspiracies and disinformation, citizens perceive misinformation as a salient and threatening issue. Especially amidst disruptive events and crises, news users are likely to believe that information is inaccurate or deceptive. Using an original 19‐country comparative survey study across diverse regions in the world (N = 19,037), we find that news users are likely to regard information on the Russian war in Ukraine as false. They are more likely to attribute false information to deliberative deception than to a lack of access to the war area or inaccurate expert knowledge. Russian sources are substantially more likely to be blamed for falsehoods than Ukrainian or Western sources – but these attribution biases depend on a country's position on the war. Our findings reveal that people mostly believe that falsehoods are intended to deceive them, and selectively associate misinformation with the opposed camp.

Funder

Economic and Social Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

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