
"There is very little research on immigrants as a group here in Iceland. We decided to look into how they felt during the COVID-19 pandemic, since there is already a lot of data about how Icelanders felt during the pandemic and their attitudes toward the public health restrictions and vaccinations," says Katrín Lea Elenudóttir, political science student. This study, which received support from the Student Innovation Fund, was completed last summer and looked at the experiences of immigrants in Iceland during the pandemic. Katrín worked under the supervision of Hulda Þórisdóttir, senior lecturer at the University of Iceland Faculty of Political Science.
The study focused on immigrants from Central and Eastern Europe, specifically Russia and Poland. "Statistical data shows that vaccine hesitancy is highest in Russia and Poland, out of all the countries where vaccination is easily accessible," explains Katrín, adding: "If vaccine hesitancy is so high there, what about people from these countries living in Iceland?"
Katrín's research was conducted as preparation for her BA thesis in political science, for which she intends to research this topic further using a larger cohort. For this study, she recruited ten participants, five from Poland and five from Russia, aged 30-45. She interviewed these participants, asking questions on three distinct themes: where they got their information about the coronavirus pandemic; whether they had been vaccinated against COVID-19 and, if not, why not; and their attitudes towards the public health restrictions imposed by the Icelandic authorities. Katrín's interviewees had all moved to Iceland in adulthood and lived here for the duration of the pandemic.
Conspiracy theories and lack of trust in media from their countries of origin
According to Katrín, four main conclusions can be drawn from the interviews. One of the things that became apparent was that the majority of participants sought information about the pandemic both from the Icelandic media and foreign media, although not from their country of origin.
"They followed Icelandic news and trusted Icelandic media and the same can be said of foreign outlets such as CNN and the BBC, but as a group they had little faith in Polish and Russian media. They did read it, but always with caution, particularly the Russians. They actually avoided Russian media."