Paul Goble
Staunton,
August 9 – The questions people ask about other countries have always said a
lot about how they view it; and how they do drives many of the policies their
governments adopt about these states.
Now, with the rise of Big Data, it is possible to discuss these
attitudes with far greater precision.
Yakub
Marian, a Czech researcher, has mined information about the Google searches
Americans make about other countries – specifically when they ask “why does
country x or y do what it does or have
the features that Americans know about it (jakubmarian.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/google-why-does.jpg).
Sergey Polatzhitsky of the
Belarusian ThinkTanks portal says
that Americans using Google asked about his country most often “Why does
Belarus exist?” They also ask a similar
question about Moldova. And about Ukraine, they inquire, “why does Ukraine want
Crimea?” (thinktanks.by/publication/2018/08/09/pochemu-belarus-suschestvuet.html).
Americans ask very different
questions about other countries in Europe: About Russia, their leading query is
“why does Russia support Assad?” about Latvia, “why does Latvia have high-speed
Internet?” about Lithuania, they ask “why in Lithuania is there a high level of
mortality?”
Looking further to the West, the
study finds, Americans asked “why are there no snakes in Ireland?” “why does
Finland have the best schools in the world?” and ‘why do they speak French in
France?”
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