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%T The Multilingual Twitter Discourse on Vaccination in Germany During the Covid-19 Pandemic
%A Schmid-Petri, Hannah
%A Bürger, Moritz
%A Schlögl, Stephan
%A Schwind, Mara
%A Mitrović, Jelena
%A Kühn, Ramona
%J Media and Communication
%N 1
%P 293-305
%V 11
%D 2023
%K Covid-19; multilingual communities; vaccination debate
%@ 2183-2439
%U https://www.cogitatiopress.com/mediaandcommunication/article/view/6058/3132
%X There is evidence that specific segments of the population were hit particularly hard by the Covid-19 pandemic (e.g., people with a migration background). In this context, the impact and role played by online platforms in facilitating the integration or fragmentation of public debates and social groups is a recurring topic of discussion. This is where our study ties in, we ask: How is the topic of vaccination discussed and evaluated in different language communities in Germany on Twitter during the Covid-19 pandemic? We collected all tweets in German, Russian, Turkish, and Polish (i.e., the largest migrant groups in Germany) in March 2021 that included the most important keywords related to Covid-19 vaccination. All users were automatically geocoded. The data was limited to tweets from Germany. Our results show that the multilingual debate on Covid-19 vaccination in Germany does not have many structural connections. However, in terms of actors, arguments, and positions towards Covid-19 vaccination, the discussion in the different language communities is similar. This indicates that there is a parallelism of the debates but no social-discursive integration.
%C PRT
%G en
%9 Zeitschriftenartikel
%W GESIS - http://www.gesis.org
%~ SSOAR - http://www.ssoar.info