“…In other words, the concept of coproduction can help explain why competing, often-contradictory shared mental models coexist and why pernicious models persist despite governmental and nongovernmental efforts to counter them. This novel extension of the theory of coproduction (Parks et al ., 1981) to cognitive institutions highlights two crucial points: first, cognitive institutions are coproduced by citizens, communities, and organizations (governmental and nongovernmental); second, the crafting of cognitive institutions is a decentralized and competitive process in which cognitive and behavioral norms are coproduced by multiple actors ‘with differing interests, values, and worldviews’ (Frolov, 2022: 3). Thus, citizens are continually involved in the production, modification, contestation, and deterioration of different shared mental models.…”