Payment for this pre-order will be taken when the item becomes available
Flat rate of $10.00 for shipping anywhere in Australia
You must sign in to add this item to your wishlist. Please sign in or create an account
How can we build back truth online? Here’s how.
How can we build back truth online? In this book, researcher Leslie F. Stebbins provides solutions for repairing our existing social media platforms and building better ones that prioritize value over profit, strengthen community ties, and promote access to trustworthy information.
Stebbins provides a road map with six paths forward to understand how platforms are designed to exploit us, how we can learn to embrace agency in our interactions with digital spaces, how to build tools to reduce harmful practices, how platform companies can prioritize the public good, how we can repair journalism, and how to strengthen curation to promote trusted content and create new, healthier digital public squares.
New, experimental models that are ethically designed to build community and promote trustworthy content are having some early successes. We know that human social networks—online and off—magnify whatever they are seeded with. They are not neutral. We also know that to repair our systems we need to repair their design.
We are being joined in the fight by some of the best and brightest minds of our current generation as they flee big tech companies in search of vocations that value integrity and public values. The problem of misinformation is not insurmountable. We can fix this.
Published | 16 Oct 2025 |
---|---|
Format | Paperback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 288 |
ISBN | 9798216365501 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Dimensions | 229 x 152 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
In Building Back Truth in an Age of Misinformation, Stebbins, a former librarian, devotes several chapters to the importance of media literacy for young people and building trust in journalism. She is realistic about the limits of this approach.... She concludes by calling for alternatives to Big Tech, and by promoting small-scale local platforms, which she terms “New Digital Public Squares.” Stebbins optimistically describes grassroots attempts to found community-based public squares, such as the Front Porch Forum in Vermont, where people can send helpful and friendly messages to their neighbors.
American Prospect
Digital worlds promote misinformation, erode our understanding of the world, and compromise our access to the truth. Stebbins, an independent researcher and the director of Research4Ed, sheds light on the topic of misinformation and offers six paths forward to create digital spaces that prioritize the public and improve information quality: understanding how platforms are designed to exploit us, embracing agency in our interactions with digital spaces, building tools to reduce harmful practices, requiring platform companies to prioritize public good, repairing journalism, and strengthening curation to promote trusted content. She also delves into the causes of misinformation, such as a focus on profits over public value. Stebbins presents a well-researched argument, writing with an air of hope for a future of reform, improved policies, and public engagement. This book will appeal to a wide range of readers, especially teachers and students, legislators, and those in journalism and communication fields.
Booklist
In her groundbreaking work, Building Back Truth in an Age of Misinformation, Stebbins not only approaches the problems of misinformation with clarity and compassion, she charts a dynamic, care-centered response to information disorder that prioritizes agency and intentionality in how we engage in information ecosystems today. 'This book is about Hope,' Stebbins writes. A hope that is reflected in her thoughtful approaches to reforming platforms, policies, and public engagement to make our information environments more inclusive, equitable, and in service of those at the margins of society today.
Paul Mihailidis, associate professor of civic media and journalism in the school of communication at Emerson College and Faculty Chair and Director of the Salzburg Academy on Media & Global Change
A librarian/researcher can be a superhero—as Leslie Stebbins demonstrates in this searing investigation of misinformation and detailed discussion of meaningful reforms... Stebbins makes clear there is no right to viral amplification of speech—and shows promising ways to fight digital boosting of false and harmful words.
Martha Minow, author of Saving the News and 300th Anniversary University Professor, Harvard University, Professor of Law and former Dean of Harvard Law School
Unlike most discussions of our polluted information environment, Stebbins takes a holistic view, outlining ways we can teach better, create a healthier environment for journalism, build better checks and balances into our social media platforms, use public policy to promote the public good and build new, robust digital public squares for the public good. This is a hopeful, informative, big-picture roadmap for our time.
Barbara Fister, Professor Emirata in Library, Gustavus Adolphus College and author of The Librarian War Against QAnon
Building Back Truth in an Age of Misinformation is proof we can protect ourselves from the deluge of toxic lies being pumped out on social media platforms and find the trustworthy information we need. This book lays out a smart and convincing argument for restoring our hope in a public interest internet that early pioneers once envisioned.
Alison Head, Director of Project Information Literacy
Get 30% off in the May sale - for one week only
Your School account is not valid for the Australia site. You have been logged out of your account.
You are on the Australia site. Would you like to go to the United States site?
Error message.