Contact tracing apps, nationalism, and users with disability in the Global South: The faith in state and collective objective

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Abstract

Contact tracing apps have magnified the potential usefulness of mobile media and communication technologies for responding to disruptive events such as the COVID-19 pandemic. Their efficacy and ethical debates have become the focus of recent studies in the Global North. Reasons for using contact tracing apps among users with disability living in the Global South, however, seem to be understudied. Through cases from Indonesia and Vietnam, this study found that nationalistic values were among the reasons for using contact tracing apps as reflected in the users’ faith in the state and inclination to support its collective objective to control the pandemic. The users believed the state would be accountable in managing the personal and mobility data the contact tracing apps collected. Using contact tracing apps represented the users’ sense of capabilities to individually partake in the existing efforts to control the pandemic.

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APA

Rohman, A., & Pitaloka, D. (2023). Contact tracing apps, nationalism, and users with disability in the Global South: The faith in state and collective objective. Mobile Media and Communication, 11(2), 230–247. https://doi.org/10.1177/20501579231158908

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