Publicação
Digital Inequality in Theory and Practice: Old and New Divides in the Broadband Era
| Resumo: | As of 2017, the number of ICT users worldwide reached 4 billion people – it was only 16 million in 1995. According to its early observers, the World Wide Web could effectively tackle socio-economic inequalities, promoting the diffusion of information and opportunities on the four corners of the globe. However, despite the expectations, “digital dividends†arising from new technologies have been distributed unevenly, missing the point of a dramatic, wide-spread emancipatory impetus. Furthermore, as the advantaged tend to seize resources and skills needed for benefitting from the ICTs, the deprived could be further “driven out†from the broadband revolution. Building on these concerns, the aim of the paper is that of reviewing the “state of the art†of the digital inequality debate, shedding light on five main accounts: 1. The adaptive definition of “digital divideâ€; 2. Methodological approaches; 3. Interaction with other forms of inequalities (socio-economic status, education, race, gender, age); 4. Global dimension and “digital peripheriesâ€; 5. The intrinsically political issue of “connective actionâ€. |
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| Autores principais: | Cigna, Luca |
| Assunto: | desigualdade clivagem capital Internet banda larga inequality divide capital Internet broadband |
| Ano: | 2018 |
| País: | Portugal |
| Tipo de documento: | artigo |
| Instituição associada: | Instituto Superior Miguel Torga |
| Idioma: | inglês |
| Origem: | Interações: sociedade e as novas modernidades |
| Resumo: | As of 2017, the number of ICT users worldwide reached 4 billion people – it was only 16 million in 1995. According to its early observers, the World Wide Web could effectively tackle socio-economic inequalities, promoting the diffusion of information and opportunities on the four corners of the globe. However, despite the expectations, “digital dividends†arising from new technologies have been distributed unevenly, missing the point of a dramatic, wide-spread emancipatory impetus. Furthermore, as the advantaged tend to seize resources and skills needed for benefitting from the ICTs, the deprived could be further “driven out†from the broadband revolution. Building on these concerns, the aim of the paper is that of reviewing the “state of the art†of the digital inequality debate, shedding light on five main accounts: 1. The adaptive definition of “digital divideâ€; 2. Methodological approaches; 3. Interaction with other forms of inequalities (socio-economic status, education, race, gender, age); 4. Global dimension and “digital peripheriesâ€; 5. The intrinsically political issue of “connective actionâ€. |
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