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Container Collapse and Misinformation: Why Digitization Creates Challenges for Democracy

Libraries and the Global Retreat of Democracy: Confronting Polarization, Misinformation, and Suppression

ISBN: 978-1-83982-597-2, eISBN: 978-1-83982-596-5

Publication date: 4 November 2021

Abstract

This chapter examines the impact of information digitization on the rise of misinformation, and the broader implications that this has for democracy. It is based on the Researching Students Information Choices (RSIC) project, which looks at how students evaluate scientific information on the internet.1 Part of this study looked at container collapse.

In previous decades, information was contained in a physical book, newspaper, journal, magazine, or the like. These containers offered important contextual information about the origin and validity of the information. With information digitized, this context is lost. This can facilitate misinformation, as people might make incorrect judgments about information credibility because of the lack of context.

It is vital that citizens have the information literacy skills to initially evaluate information correctly. One possibility for misinformation being pervasive is that, once encoded, it becomes resistant to correction. This underscores the importance of teaching students to evaluate the credibility of information prior to the point of encoding.

To combat misinformation, librarians can teach students to evaluate containers and the indicators of credibility that they provide. Information containers can be evaluated prior to consuming information within a resource, while fact-checking only can happen after. Because of this, container evaluation can help prevent misinformation from being encoded. Our research demonstrates that this requires thoughtful engagement with the information resources and critical evaluation of the sources that produced them, and that students cannot accurately identify containers when they rely on heuristics like the URL and Google snippet.

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Acknowledgements

Acknowledgments

Thanks to the other members of the RSIC team: Amy Buhler, Tara Cataldo Tobin, Ixchel Faniel, Lynn Silipigni Connaway, Joyce Valenza, Brittany Brannon, Rachael Elrod, Sam Putnam, Erin Hood, Kailey Langer, and Randy Graff.

This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under grant number LG-81-15-0155.

Citation

Cyr, C. (2021), "Container Collapse and Misinformation: Why Digitization Creates Challenges for Democracy", Taylor, N.G., Kettnich, K., Gorham, U. and Jaeger, P.T. (Ed.) Libraries and the Global Retreat of Democracy: Confronting Polarization, Misinformation, and Suppression (Advances in Librarianship, Vol. 50), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 91-108. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0065-283020210000050004

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

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