Infodemic as a Factor of Social Security and Anti-Infodemic Policy

Infodemic as a Factor of Social Security and Anti-Infodemic Policy

Authors

Keywords:

Infodemic, social well-being, social security, information policy, public policy

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic in the shortest possible time has changed the modern familiar world, forcing humanity to reconsider the basic principles of organizing relations between the state and civil society, various subjects of global politics, including international government organizations, global information platforms, and expert and analytical structures. In parallel with the pandemic itself, the processes of exponentially growing and often false information about the causes, prospects and consequences of COVID-19 (infodemic) in the global, national and local information spaces have been actively developed. This information changes the rational behavior of people, worsens their social well-being in all regions of the world, undermines the foundations of social security, creating a hostile environment due to a high degree of uncertainty and the inability of official institutions to act quickly. The article is devoted to the study of the infodemic influence on social well-being as a factor of social security at different levels of the organization of power, as well as to an overview of the measures taken by global and national structures to prevent the infodemic based on a comparative analysis. The article presents and studies anti-infodemic measures implemented by key interstate structures (UN, WHO), assesses their effectiveness and impact on national practices for countering the infodemic. The principles of the state information policy in the field of combating the infodemic at the level of individual states are generalized and systematized, the main elements and universal directions of combating the infodemic are proposed and considered, with a demonstration on the example of individual countries and world regions. The article also provides recommendations for improving the effectiveness of national practices of anti-infodemic information policy for improving the effectiveness of national practices of anti-infodemic information policy.

Author Biography

Eugenia V. Andryushina, Lomonosov Moscow State University; National University of Science and Technology MISIS

PhD, Associate Professor, School of Public Administration, Lomonosov Moscow State University; Associate Professor, National University of Science and Technology MISIS. Moscow, Russian Federation.

eugenie80@mail.ru

References

Ардашкин И.Б., Корниенко А.А. Общество социального благополучия versus общества социальной безответственности: pro et contra // Общество и непрерывное благополучие человека: сборник научных трудов Международного научного симпозиума «Общество и непрерывное благополучие человека». Томск: Изд-во ТПУ, 2014. С. 165–174.

Костина Е.Ю. Социальное благополучие и социальная безопасность в условиях глобализации современного общества // Universum: Общественные науки. 2015. № 6 (16). URL: https://7universum. com/ru/social/archive/item/2277

Попов Е.А. Социальное благополучие человека в научном дискурсе // Социология в современном мире: наука, образование, творчество. 2010. № 2. С. 16–23.

Разинский Г.В. Факторы, определяющие социальное благополучие / неблагополучие в современном городе // Власть. 2014. № 6. С. 136–140.

Раренко А.А., Воронцова В.О. Инфодемия в условиях пандемии COVID-19 // Социальные и гуманитарные науки. Отечественная и зарубежная литература. Серия 11: Социология. 2021. № 2. С. 94–104.

Facchinetti S., Siletti E. Well-being Indicators: A Review and Comparison in the Context of Italy // Social Indicators Research. 2022. Vol. 159. P. 523–547. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11205-021-02761-0

Fahey R.A., Hino A. COVID-19, Digital Privacy, and the Social Limits on Data-Focused Public Health Responses // International Journal of Information Management. 2020. Vol. 55. DOI: 10.1016/j.ijinfomgt.2020.102181

Gómez-Salgado J., Domínguez-Salas S., Romero-Martín M., Ortega-Moreno M., García-Iglesias J.J., Ruiz-Frutos C. Sense of Coherence and Psychological Distress among Healthcare Workers During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Spain // Sustainability. 2020. Vol. 12. Is. 17. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/su12176855

Gupta S., Nguyen T.D., Rojas F.L., Raman S., Lee B., Bento A., Simon K.I., Wing C. Tracking Public and Private Responses to the COVID-19 Epidemic: Evidence from State and Local Government Actions // National Bureau of Economic Research. 2020. Working Paper 27027. DOI: 10.3386/w27027

Heath R.L., O’Hair D.H. The Significance of Crisis and Risk Communication // Handbook of Risk and Crisis Communication / ed. by Robert L. Heath, H. Dan O’Hair. New York: Routledge, 2009. DOI: 10.4324/9781003070726

Hu G., Li P., Yuan C., Tao C., Wen H., Liu Q., Qiu W. Information Disclosure during the COVID-19 Epidemic in China: City-Level Observational Study // Journal of Medical Internet Research. 2020. Vol. 22. Is. 8. DOI: 10.2196/19572

Kwon K.H., Bang C.C., Egnoto M., Rao H.R. Social Media Rumors as Improvised Public Opinion: Semantic Network Analyses of Twitter Discourses during Korean Saber Rattling 2013 // Asian Journal of Communication. 2016. Vol. 26. Is. 3. P. 201–222. DOI: 10.1080/01292986.2015.1130157

Islam S., Sarkar T., Khan S., Kamal A-H., Hasan M., Kabir A., Yeasmin D., Islam M., Chowdhury K., Anwar K., Chughtai A., Seale H. COVID-19-Related Infodemic and Its Impact on Public Health: A Global Social Media Analysis // The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. 2020. Vol. 103. Is. 4. P. 1621–1629. DOI: 10.4269/ajtmh.20-0812

Moon M.J. Fighting COVID-19 with Agility, Transparency, and Participation: Wicked Policy Problems and New Governance Challenges // Public Administration Review. 2020. Vol. 80. Is. 4. P. 651–656. DOI: 10.1111/puar.13214

Norris F.H., Stevens S.P., Pfefferbaum B., Wyche K.F., Pfefferbaum R.L. Community Resilience as a Metaphor, Theory, Set of Capacities, and Strategy for Disaster Readiness // American Journal of Community Psychology. 2008. Vol. 41. Is. 1-2. P. 127–150. DOI: 10.1007/s10464-007-9156-6

Shaw R., Kim Y., Hua J. Governance, Technology and Citizen Behavior in Pandemic: Lessons from COVID-19 in East Asia // Progress in Disaster Science. 2020. Vol. 6. DOI: 10.1016/j.pdisas.2020.100090

Smith L.E., Potts H.W.W., Amlot R., Fear N.T., Michie S., Rubin J. Adherence to the Test, Trace and Isolate System: Results from a Time Series of 21 Nationally Representative Surveys in the UK (the COVID-19 Rapid Survey of Adherence to Interventions and Responses [CORSAIR] study) // BMJ. 2021. DOI: 10.1136/bmj.n608

Downloads

Published

2022-10-30

How to Cite

Infodemic as a Factor of Social Security and Anti-Infodemic Policy. (2022). Public Administration. E-Journal (Russia), 95, 53-63. https://spajournal.ru/index.php/spa/article/view/89

Issue

Section

Scientific articles

Categories

How to Cite

Infodemic as a Factor of Social Security and Anti-Infodemic Policy. (2022). Public Administration. E-Journal (Russia), 95, 53-63. https://spajournal.ru/index.php/spa/article/view/89

Most read articles by the same author(s)

Similar Articles

1-10 of 316

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

Loading...