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Abstract:

The decline in the number and quality of local news media has led to digital platforms becoming more central in circulating local information, affecting what information and issues are accessible to community residents. We demonstrate this by focusing on health disparities related to COVID-19, examining how both news and non-news civic organizations in six Great Lakes communities addressed pandemic-related racial inequities. Our analysis of interviews and a corpus of Facebook posts suggest that (1) very little discussion of health disparities emerged on Facebook from organizations in these communities, and (2) the majority of this content was produced by local news outlets. This article offers a vision of what local content might look like in the absence of robust local news outlets and highlights potential consequences of local civic information infrastructure with digital platforms playing a central role.

Citation

Battocchio, A. F., Thorson, K., Hiaeshutter-Rice, D., Smith, M., Chen, Y., Edgerly, S., Cotter, K., Choung, H., Dong, C., Moldagaliyeva, M., & Etheridge, C. E. (2023). Who Will Tell the Stories of Health Inequities? Platform Challenges (and Opportunities) in Local Civic Information Infrastructure. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 707(1), 144-171. https://doi.org/10.1177/00027162231214398 .

@article{doi:10.1177/00027162231214398,
author = {Ava Francesca Battocchio and Kjerstin Thorson and Dan Hiaeshutter-Rice and Marisa Smith and Yingying Chen and Stephanie Edgerly and Kelley Cotter and Hyesun Choung and Chuqing Dong and Moldir Moldagaliyeva and Christopher E. Etheridge},
title ={Who Will Tell the Stories of Health Inequities? Platform Challenges (and Opportunities) in Local Civic Information Infrastructure},
journal = {The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science},
volume = {707},
number = {1},
pages = {144-171},
year = {2023},
doi = {10.1177/00027162231214398},
URL = {https://doi.org/10.1177/00027162231214398}}