The Best, the Worst, and the Hardest to Find: How People, Mobiles, and Social Media Connect Migrants In(to) Europe

For displaced people, migrating into Europe has highly complex information needs about the journey and destination. Each new need presents problems of where to seek information, how to trust or distrust information, and financial and other costs. The outcomes of receiving poor or false information c...

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Main Authors: Maren Borkert, Karen E. Fisher, Eiad Yafi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2018-03-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305118764428
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spelling doaj-5451708c389645e8b277fd1c5cd48f232020-11-25T03:43:17ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512018-03-01410.1177/2056305118764428The Best, the Worst, and the Hardest to Find: How People, Mobiles, and Social Media Connect Migrants In(to) EuropeMaren Borkert0Karen E. Fisher1Eiad Yafi2Technical University Berlin, GermanyÅbo Akademi University, FinlandUniversiti Kuala Lumpur, MalaysiaFor displaced people, migrating into Europe has highly complex information needs about the journey and destination. Each new need presents problems of where to seek information, how to trust or distrust information, and financial and other costs. The outcomes of receiving poor or false information can cause bodily harm or death, loss of family, or financial ruin. We aim to make two major contributions: First, provide rich insights into digital literacy, information needs, and strategies among Syrian and Iraqi refugees who entered Europe in 2015, a topic rarely dealt with in the literature. Second, we seek to change the dominant perspective on migrants and refugees as passive victims of international events and policies by showing their capacities and skills to navigate the complex landscape of information and border regimes en route to Europe. Building on research at Za’atari refugee camp (Jordan), we surveyed 83 Arab refugees in two centers in Berlin. Analyses address refugees’ temporal information worlds, focusing on the importance and difficulty in finding specific information, how migrants identify mis- and disinformation, and the roles of information and technology mediaries. Findings illustrate the digital capacities refugees employ during and after their journey to Europe; they show social support via social media and highlight the need for a radical shift in thinking about and researching migration in the digital age.https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305118764428
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maren Borkert
Karen E. Fisher
Eiad Yafi
spellingShingle Maren Borkert
Karen E. Fisher
Eiad Yafi
The Best, the Worst, and the Hardest to Find: How People, Mobiles, and Social Media Connect Migrants In(to) Europe
Social Media + Society
author_facet Maren Borkert
Karen E. Fisher
Eiad Yafi
author_sort Maren Borkert
title The Best, the Worst, and the Hardest to Find: How People, Mobiles, and Social Media Connect Migrants In(to) Europe
title_short The Best, the Worst, and the Hardest to Find: How People, Mobiles, and Social Media Connect Migrants In(to) Europe
title_full The Best, the Worst, and the Hardest to Find: How People, Mobiles, and Social Media Connect Migrants In(to) Europe
title_fullStr The Best, the Worst, and the Hardest to Find: How People, Mobiles, and Social Media Connect Migrants In(to) Europe
title_full_unstemmed The Best, the Worst, and the Hardest to Find: How People, Mobiles, and Social Media Connect Migrants In(to) Europe
title_sort best, the worst, and the hardest to find: how people, mobiles, and social media connect migrants in(to) europe
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Social Media + Society
issn 2056-3051
publishDate 2018-03-01
description For displaced people, migrating into Europe has highly complex information needs about the journey and destination. Each new need presents problems of where to seek information, how to trust or distrust information, and financial and other costs. The outcomes of receiving poor or false information can cause bodily harm or death, loss of family, or financial ruin. We aim to make two major contributions: First, provide rich insights into digital literacy, information needs, and strategies among Syrian and Iraqi refugees who entered Europe in 2015, a topic rarely dealt with in the literature. Second, we seek to change the dominant perspective on migrants and refugees as passive victims of international events and policies by showing their capacities and skills to navigate the complex landscape of information and border regimes en route to Europe. Building on research at Za’atari refugee camp (Jordan), we surveyed 83 Arab refugees in two centers in Berlin. Analyses address refugees’ temporal information worlds, focusing on the importance and difficulty in finding specific information, how migrants identify mis- and disinformation, and the roles of information and technology mediaries. Findings illustrate the digital capacities refugees employ during and after their journey to Europe; they show social support via social media and highlight the need for a radical shift in thinking about and researching migration in the digital age.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2056305118764428
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