The reality is we need to get SE to give us better tools to use the site better. Without that, we are just complaining to each other about how badly we use the site with no hope of actually making the site, questions, or answers better.
Searching
One way we can get more people to search for existing questions and answers, instead of asking new questions, is to have SE make their on-site search functionality better. If that means they scrap their current functionality and replace it with Google or some other easy to use and reliable 3rd party system, but make it work on-site, then that works for me.
This includes the real-time searching happening when creating a title for a new question. Rarely have I found those results to be useful, and sometimes they aren't even relevant.
Once we get a better search functionality, we should automatically see fewer duplicate questions being generated. Not everyone, especially new users, will understand how broken the on-site Search bar is, so will use it thinking that it's working. They will then create a new question because that search failed them and so did the search when creating a title for their duplicate question.
Even those of us with lots of experience using SE have a hard time finding the correct solutions, including when looking to mark an question a duplicate. User VLAZ mentioned it in a comment with their answer here describing some of their problems.
Answer tags
Answers should get the same kinds of tags that questions do. We can tag them with language/library/etc. names and version numbers so people looking for answers aren't trying solutions that have been deprecated since the answer was written or is for a later version than the user needs. I can't tell you how many times I've gone though this myself.
I've seen questions that ask for specific languages to be used to solve a problem, then answers use a different language as an example. Tagging the answer with the language can be helpful, since sticking to the same language the question asks for isn't always necessary or followed.
We can also use these tags to make searching more reliable and relevant.
Other considerations
We should also consider having SE drop the -1 cost to reputation points for down voting. There's long discussions about that, so I won't get into it here.
We need more positive rewards for going through queues, marking items as duplicates, flagging for deletion, and more. Even editing a question or answer should gain you more than 2 points. And really, positive reinforcement works better than punishment. I'll even admit that I've refused to downvote because I just gained a privilege and downvoting would have taken it away.
Bugs and features with tracking
We currently use Meta as a bug reporting and feature request system. Unfortunately, that's not a very good system, which is apparent when there are so many duplicates asking for the same features and bug fixes year after year, yet nothing happens. We need to get SE to adopt a better system, then use it appropriately as users to get the features we need.
In a comment on the original question I asked the question: "why not put more pressure on SE for fixing the search functionality". And user VLAZ replied with:
sorry, what do you expect me to do which 1. I haven't 2. would be effective? I've supported any suggestion of a better search I've seen. SE have repeatedly shown they don't care about this through their inaction. I'm unaware of what I specifically can do to change this.
Well, we get them to commit to a new system and hold them to it. As of right now, that might be like pulling teeth, but it would go a long way to making things better, instead of complaining into the apparent void and echo chamber of Meta, where SE doesn't really seem to care no matter how many users repeat the same sentiments.
How does getting bug and feature tracking help fix the OP's problem? Well, it doesn't directly, but it does help us get the Search bar fixed, better ways to search (answer tags), and deal with other problems hindering/preventing question-askers from doing the research they should.
Conclusion
If users don't have the on-site tools they need to research properly, then we can't really complain when they don't do research. If they/we can't find duplicates, we shouldn't complain when people don't find them without prior knowledge of them. Heck, I can't find answers I've written because of how badly the Search functionality works.
Incidentally, I see many people complaining about users doing something wrong, or not doing something when it really comes down to the site not working as well as it should. More emphasis should be put on getting SE to fix problems than getting users to work around them.
Another answer here by Lundin says to mark duplicates by looking at the root cause, rather than the symptoms. Well, I think we should fix the problems on SE at the root cause of the site rather than the symptom of how people use it. This will actually reduce the amount of moderation and curation needed (as well as posting on Meta about how bad users are), reducing the amount of work everyone needs to do, instead of asking everyone to do more work.
Once we get Searching and other systems fixed, canonical answers should start popping up on their own more often without having to be curated by subject matter experts so much.
Edit: There's already a feature-request
out for replacing the built-in search with Google results, but that's 7.5 years old and apparently didn't go anywhere.
Replace the built-in Elastic Search with results from Google instead