Jung Gowoon, Jang Sou Hyun
Department of Sociology, Kyung Hee University, Dongdaemun-gu, Seoul, South Korea.
Department of Sociology, Korea University, Seongbuk-gu, Seoul, South Korea.
Asian J Soc Sci. 2022 Dec;50(4):292-300. doi: 10.1016/j.ajss.2022.04.001. Epub 2022 May 2.
The rule of social distancing, coupled with the closing down of ethnic enclaves, has led immigrants to become isolated from their ethnic groups. In this study, we investigate the increasing role of ethnic online communities in immigrants' information-seeking behaviors during the COVID-19 pandemic. An analysis of 726 posts in MissyUSA reveals how an ethnic online community helps Korean immigrant women deal with the pandemic, reflecting the essence of a community amid societal lockdown. The findings suggest that these online communities supplement immigrant women's medical knowledge, build non-medical knowledge helpful to disadvantaged immigrants, and offer transnational knowledge regarding medical systems, products, and travel. These results provide evidence of how ethnic online communities promote immigrants' ongoing incorporation into society through the development of domestically and transnationally engaged medical and non-medical knowledge.
社交距离规则,再加上族裔聚居区的关闭,导致移民与他们的族裔群体隔离开来。在本研究中,我们调查了族裔在线社区在新冠疫情期间移民信息寻求行为中日益重要的作用。对“美国密西”网站上726篇帖子的分析揭示了一个族裔在线社区如何帮助韩国移民女性应对疫情,反映出社会封锁期间社区的本质。研究结果表明,这些在线社区补充了移民女性的医学知识,构建了对弱势移民有帮助的非医学知识,并提供了有关医疗系统、产品和旅行的跨国知识。这些结果证明了族裔在线社区如何通过发展国内和跨国的医学及非医学知识,促进移民持续融入社会。