Copaganda: How Police and the Media Manipulate Our News
By (Author) Alec Karakatsanis
The New Press
The New Press
23rd July 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Central / national / federal government policies
Political control and freedoms
Hardback
256
Width 139mm, Height 215mm, Spine 16mm
From the prizewinning rising legal star, the deeply researched and definitive book on the way the media and police distract us from what matters
Copaganda, as defined by Alec Karakatsanis, describes a special kind of propaganda that affects who and what we fear and what kinds of social investments we support to address our fears. At a time when the United States incarcerates five times more people per capita than its own historical average and five to ten times more people per capita than other countries, its vast punishment bureaucracy spends huge amounts of time and money manipulating the rest of us to see the world from its point of view.
As a result, we see a grossly distorted version of crime, punishment, and safety in our newspapers, magazines, and other media outlets. The news generates fear by focusing on crimes committed by the most marginalized people while ignoring far more serious threats to our collective well-being, from wage theft by corporations to environmental crimes to the deaths that result from cigarette smoke (which make the number of violent crimes pale in comparison). And it falsely suggests that the best way to respond to our fear is to increase government repression through police, prosecution, and prisons as opposed to addressing the root causes of interpersonal harm.
In the spirit of such classics as Noam Chomskys Manufacturing Consent, Copaganda includes chapters on What Is News, Public Relations Spending by the Police, Whose Perspective How Sources Shape News, How the News Uses Experts, How to Smuggle Ideology into the News, and Academic Copaganda.
Already called one of the most prominent voices on [copaganda] (Teen Vogue), with a huge following on social media and appearances discussing copaganda on The Daily Show with Trevor Noah and The Breakfast Club, Karakatsanis brings a legal eye, humor, gripping personal stories, and a keen ability to read between the lines to a topic at the forefront of one of the most pressing public debates in our society.
A former public defender, Alec Karakatsanis is the founder of the Civil Rights Corps, an organization designed to advocate for racial justice and bring systemic civil rights cases on behalf of impoverished people. He was named the 2016 Trial Lawyer of the Year by Public Justice and was awarded the Stephen B. Bright Award for contributions to indigent defense in the South by Gideons Promise. The author of Usual Cruelty: The Complicity of Lawyers in the Criminal Injustice System (The New Press), he lives in Washington, DC.