“…Scholars have investigated the usefulness of information grounds theory for discussing the role of place in information seeking and sharing (Gibson & Kaplan, 2017). Recent studies have documented information grounds among refugees moving from countries where they are at risk to developed countries (Fisher, Yefimova, & Yafi, 2016; Oduntan & Ruthven, 2020), Israeli migrant workers (Bronstein, 2017), Chinese parents of children with autism (An, Na, & Zhang, 2019), Latino undocumented immigrants (Baron & Gomez, 2017), Iranian students from different socio‐economic backgrounds (Soheili, Mansoori, & Khaseh, 2016), and U.S. students with disabilities (Williams & Smith, 2016), which are situated within their everyday lives and used to interact and look for social connections. Public places such as cafés could facilitate adversaries in establishing common grounds in an Indonesian conflict zone (Rohman & Pang, 2015; Rohman, 2020), demonstrating that interactions in such places can play critical roles in promoting peace (Williams, Megoran, & Mcconnell, 2013).…”