
COVID‐19 and Facebook in Papua New Guinea: Fly River Forum
Author(s) -
Dwyer Peter D.,
Minnegal Monica
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
asia and the pacific policy studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.529
H-Index - 14
ISSN - 2050-2680
DOI - 10.1002/app5.312
Subject(s) - new guinea , pandemic , skepticism , government (linguistics) , covid-19 , state of emergency , political science , public relations , media studies , sociology , economic growth , law , ethnology , politics , medicine , philosophy , linguistics , disease , epistemology , pathology , infectious disease (medical specialty) , economics
This article examines use of a Papua New Guinea (PNG) Facebook group, Fly River Forum, with reference to the COVID‐19 global pandemic. From about mid‐March 2020, when the PNG Government declared a State of Emergency, to early May, members of that forum shared an intense interest in the pandemic and were deeply concerned with its possible implications for the country. The great majority of COVID‐related posts, and associated comments, combined delivery of relevant information with scepticism about some of that information. Most participants did not take either religious tropes or conspiracy theories as primary sources of comfort or explanation. We argue that Fly River Forum played a positive role in the ways that people engaged with what could have emerged as a health disaster. More generally, geographically focused sites such as this provide a valuable barometer of local opinion and deserve close attention by politicians and policymakers in PNG.