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Misinformation in Referenda

Edited by: Sandrine Baume, Veronique Boillet, Vincent Martenet

ISBN13: 9780367224035
Published: July 2020
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £150.00



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This book identifies the impact of misinformation in the context of referenda.

While the notion of misinformation is at the center of current events and is the subject of several studies, it has rarely been addressed in the context of referenda nor from a multidisciplinary and comparative perspective. This book fills this gap. Different legal orders have been chosen because of their extensive referendum practices, namely, California, Switzerland and Italy; a recent legislative process on the issue of misinformation, Germany and France; or recent experience with a vote during which it was considered that false information had been disseminated, Brexit and Catalan independence. By bringing together authors from the political and legal sciences, the book focuses on combining the expertise of researchers from different backgrounds and origins in order to propose innovative solutions. In this regard, the book is characterized by the fact that it does not aim to combat misinformation per se, but develops suggestions meant to guarantee the conditions of formation of the political will during referenda.

The book will be an invaluable resource for legal scholars, political scientists and specialists of political communication. Outside the world of academia, the book may draw the attention of policy-makers, practitioners and journalists confronted with the challenges of misinformation or disinformation.

Subjects:
Constitutional and Administrative Law
Contents:
Introduction
Krista B. Nadakavukaren Schefer
Part I – Misinformation disorder, misuse of statistics, and fact-checking
1. Sincerity in politics: How much is too much?
Sorin Baiasu
2. Why informed opinions matter for democracy and why misinformation should not be underestimated in referendum processes
Sandrine Baume
3. The (mis)use of statistics in referendum votes
Anke Tresch and Lukas Lauener
4. Fact-checking direct democracy: When journalists set out to correct misinformation
Laurent Bernhard
Part II – Judicial remedies
5. Judicial remedies in a comparative perspective
Andreas Glaser
6. Direct democracy, misinformation, and judicial review in the United States
Amanda L. Tyler
7. Judicial remedies in Switzerland
Vincent Martenet
8. Securing rational discourse surrounding referenda in Germany
Bernd Holznagel and Maximilian Hemmert-Halswick
Part III – Evolution of regulation
9. Online disinformation and freedom of expression in the democratic context: The European and Italian responses
Oreste Pollicino and Laura Somaini
10. Tackling misinformation in referendums: Lessons from anglophone democracies
Alan Renwick and Micaela Palese
11. How to define misinformation? The French attempt
Thomas Hochmann
12. The guarantee of political rights in view of misinformation: Is new regulation needed for Swiss referenda?
Michel Besson and Véronique Boillet
13. From veracity to traceability: A new Canadian legal framework for deliberative referenda
Patrick Taillon
14. All fake? Information disorders and the 2017 referendum in Catalonia
Oscar Barberà
Conclusion
Sandrine Baume, Véronique Boillet and Vincent Martenet