Agency and liminality during the COVID-19 pandemic: Why information literacy cannot fix vaccine hesitancy

Author:

Hicks Alison1ORCID,Lloyd Annemaree1

Affiliation:

1. University College London, UK

Abstract

This article employs a sociological and dialogical information perspective to identify what shape information literacy practice takes for people who are hesitant about the COVID-19 vaccine. An information perspective places information and people’s relations with information at the centre of the inquiry. The study carried out 14 semi-structured interviews with UK adults who had not yet received or taken up their invitation to have the COVID-19 vaccine. Outcomes of this study suggest that information literacy practices related to vaccine hesitancy emerged through the liminal space and in relation to agentic performance, which was catalysed through engagement with experiential, corporeal and social information. This study has implications for the teaching of information literacy, in particular, the idea that being informed is an affirmative action that will automatically empower learners to make appropriate choices.

Funder

British Academy

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Library and Information Sciences,Information Systems

Reference99 articles.

1. Institute of Global Health Innovation (IGHI). COVID-19: global attitudes towards a COVID-19 vaccine, https://www.imperial.ac.uk/media/imperial-college/institute-of-global-health-innovation/GlobalVaccineInsights_ICL-YouGov-Covid-19-Behaviour-Tracker_20210520_v2.pdf (2021, accessed 28 January 2022).

2. Kings College. COVID-19 vaccines: confidence, concerns and behaviours, https://www.kcl.ac.uk/policy-institute/assets/covid-19-vaccines-confidence-concerns-behaviours.pdf (2021, accessed 28 January 2022).

3. Gov.UK. Coronavirus (COVID-19) in the UK: vaccinations in the UK, https://coronavirus.data.gov.uk/details/vaccinations (2022, accessed 21 July 2022).

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