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

Open Access
Authors
  • P. Van Aelst
  • A.S. Cardenal
  • N. Corbu
  • P. van Erkel
  • Frank Esser
  • L. Gehle
  • D. Halagiera
  • D. Hopmann
  • K. Koc-Michalska
  • Jörg Matthes
  • C. Meltzer
  • S. Mihelj
  • C. Schemer
  • T. Sheafer
  • S. Splendore
  • J. Stanyer
  • A. Stepinska
  • V. Stetka
  • J. Strömbäck
  • L. Terren
  • Y. Theocharis
  • A. Zoizner
Publication date 11-2023
Journal European Journal of Political Research
Volume | Issue number 63 | 4
Pages (from-to) 1642-1654
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam School of Communication Research (ASCoR)
Abstract
In 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.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6765.12646
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