Authors
-
Anda Rožukalne
Riga Stradiņš University
Author
-
Sandra Murinska
Rezekne Academy of Technologies
Author
-
Alise Tifentale
Riga Stradiņš University
Author
Keywords:
conspiracy theories, COVID-19, disinformation, infodemic, Latvia, perceived disease risk
Abstract
This study examines society’s susceptibility to COVID-19-related disinformation in Latvia, linking it to self-evaluation of the perceived COVID-19 health risks. The main research questions are: “How do Latvians experience disinformation about COVID-19?”; “How does this experience relate to different degrees of perceived disease risks?”. A nationally representative survey was conducted in September 2020, reaching 1,013 of Latvia’s residents aged 18 to 75. More than half of the respondents (54%) have encountered misleading or false information; 30% thought that “the COVID-19-related chaos is beneficial to politicians”, while 17% believed that “COVID-19 is like flu”. Respondents with a higher level of education and more active media usage habits are more likely to recognise disinformation about COVID-19. Moreover, this skill is linked to a higher degree of perceived threat of the disease. Yet, those who rate their risk of disease as very high, alongside those who rate their risk of disease as low and unreal, are ‘infodemically’ vulnerable – more susceptible to disinformation, false news, and conspiracy theories. Recommendations to communicators about curbing the diffusion of disinformation and diminishing its impact are provided.
Author Biographies
-
Anda Rožukalne, Riga Stradiņš University
Anda Rožukalne is a Professor and Dean at the Faculty of Communication, Riga Stradiņš University. Her fields of expertise include the development of journalism values, innovative audience research methods, media literacy, and media regulation. She is the author of the first academic monograph on Latvian media ownership, Latvia’s Media Owners, and numerous publications on journalism quality, media systems, and media regulation in Latvia and the Baltics States. Dr. Rožukalne is an associate editor of the Central European Journal of Communication, Latvian team leader for the European Commission project ‘European Media Pluralism Monitor’, and a member of EC High Level Experts Group on Disinformation and Fake News.
-
Sandra Murinska, Rezekne Academy of Technologies
Sandra Murinska is an assistant professor at Rezekne Academy of Technologies and a leading researcher at the Research Institute for Business and Social Processes. Her fields of expertise include communication theory, journalism studies, and media literacy. She is an expert of media education and a developer of media literacy in education curricula in Latvia. Sandra Murinska is the author of educational games and materials on media literacy as well as scientific publications.
-
Alise Tifentale, Riga Stradiņš University
Alise Tifentale is a researcher at the Faculty of Communication, Riga Stradiņš University. Her fields of expertise include sociology of culture, cultural analytics, global history of photography, and transnational cultural networks. She is the co-author of social media research projects Selfiecity (2014) and The Exceptional and the Everyday: 144 Hours in Kyiv (2014). She is the author of a monograph The Photograph as Art in Latvia, 1960 – 1969 (2011), numerous journal articles, and chapters in volumes such as Routledge Companion to Photography and Visual Culture (2018).
How to Cite
Rožukalne, A., Murinska, S., & Tifentale, A. (2021). Is Covid-19 an “Ordinary Flu” That Benefits Politicians? Perception of Pandemic Disinformation in Latvia.
Communication Today,
12(2), 68-83.
https://doi.org/10.0000/b67ky781