Disruptive Information in Canada
By (Author) Ahmed Al-Rawi
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Bloomsbury Publishing USA
16th October 2025
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Reportage, journalism or collected columns
Media studies: journalism
Hardback
256
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
This book examines Canadian news content that references different terms related to fake news and disinformation while providing an analysis of Canadian journalists views on how to report on fake news and its impact in todays society.
Disruptive Information in Canada presents a discussion on the publics discourses on disruptive information in relation to Canadian issues, as the majority of previous studies are limited to the US or European contexts. It offers unique insight into fake news reporting and discourses in Canada since it examines several main areas like news coverage, journalists views, advertising, and trolling on social media.
This book offers a new theoretical conceptualization of our post-truth era by introducing the concept of Disruptive Information via focusing on news and social media content as well as journalists reporting on these issues. With the use of a mixed methods approach, it provides different insights into this important topic.
An impressively comprehensive guide to understanding how disruptive information is deployed in both Canadian news media and online discourse. Its an essential text if one wants to make sense of this often disorienting age of disinformation and misinformation. * Adrian Harewood, Professor of Jouranlism, Carleton Unviersity, Canada *
Ahmed Al-Rawi is Associate Professor of News, Social Media, and Public Communication at the School of Communication at Simon Fraser University, Canada. He is also the founder of the Disinformation Project. His research interests are related to news, global communication, and social media with emphasis on Canada and the Middle East. Al-Rawi is also a founding member of the Media & Digital Literacy Academy in Beirut, Lebanon. His new research project which is funded by a SSHRC Insight grant investigates the issues of racism and democracy from the perspective of racialized Canadian journalists, the online public, and news content, partly to understand whether racism negatively influences democracy.