论文标题

采取语言绕道:国际移民如何在其东道国寻求与共同相关的信息

Taking a Language Detour: How International Migrants Speaking a Minority Language Seek COVID-Related Information in Their Host Countries

论文作者

Gao, Ge, Zheng, Jian, Choe, Eun Kyoung, Yamashita, Naomi

论文摘要

在公共危机时期,寻求信息对于人们的自我保健和福祉至关重要。广泛的研究调查了经验理解以及技术解决方案,以促进受影响地区的家庭公民寻求信息。但是,建立有限的知识是为了支持需要在其东道国发生危机的国际移民。当前的论文对居住在日本和美国(n = 14)的两名中国移民(n = 14)进行了访谈研究。参与者反思了他们在共同大流行期间寻求经验的信息。反思补充了两周的自我追踪,参与者保持了相关信息寻求实践的记录。我们的数据表明,参与者经常绕着语言绕道,或访问普通话资源以获取有关其东道国疫情爆发的信息。他们还通过战略性地使用普通话信息来进行选择性阅读,交叉检查以及对日语或英语的共同相关信息的上下文化解释。尽管这种做法增强了参与者对共同相关信息收集和感觉的有效性,但他们有时会通过有时的认识方式使人们处于不利地位。此外,尽管有可用性,也缺乏参与者的意识或偏爱,这些信息是由东道国公共当局发布的。在这些发现的基础上,我们讨论了改善国际移民在非本地语言和文化环境中寻求相关信息的解决方案。我们主张包容性的危机基础设施,这些基础设施将吸引以当地语言流利程度,信息素养和利用公共服务的经验不同的人们。

Information seeking is crucial for people's self-care and wellbeing in times of public crises. Extensive research has investigated empirical understandings as well as technical solutions to facilitate information seeking by domestic citizens of affected regions. However, limited knowledge is established to support international migrants who need to survive a crisis in their host countries. The current paper presents an interview study with two cohorts of Chinese migrants living in Japan (N=14) and the United States (N=14). Participants reflected on their information seeking experiences during the COVID pandemic. The reflection was supplemented by two weeks of self-tracking where participants maintained records of their COVIDrelated information seeking practice. Our data indicated that participants often took language detours, or visits to Mandarin resources for information about the COVID outbreak in their host countries. They also made strategic use of the Mandarin information to perform selective reading, cross-checking, and contextualized interpretation of COVID-related information in Japanese or English. While such practices enhanced participants' perceived effectiveness of COVID-related information gathering and sensemaking, they disadvantaged people through sometimes incognizant ways. Further, participants lacked the awareness or preference to review migrant-oriented information that was issued by the host country's public authorities despite its availability. Building upon these findings, we discussed solutions to improve international migrants' COVID-related information seeking in their non-native language and cultural environment. We advocated inclusive crisis infrastructures that would engage people with diverse levels of local language fluency, information literacy, and experience in leveraging public services.

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