Journal article 590 views
Digital Divides revisited: What is new about divides and their research?
Media, Culture and Society, Volume: 33, Issue: 2, Pages: 317 - 331
Swansea University Author: Panayiota Tsatsou
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DOI (Published version): 10.1177/0163443710393865
Abstract
This article critically reviews well-established and recent trends in digital divides literature and research, bringing up new elements of divides and the related research and making recommendations about future research. First, it disentangles some aspects of the puzzling nature and ongoing importa...
Published in: | Media, Culture and Society |
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Published: |
London
Sage
2011
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Online Access: |
http://mcs.sagepub.com/content/33/2/317.extract |
URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa11353 |
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Abstract: |
This article critically reviews well-established and recent trends in digital divides literature and research, bringing up new elements of divides and the related research and making recommendations about future research. First, it disentangles some aspects of the puzzling nature and ongoing importance of digital divides. It then discusses how the concept of digital divides has evolved over the last two decades and how research literature has examined it in the same period on the basis of different attempts at contextualisation. The article brings together theoretical and empirical insights and suggests that digital divides be revisited so as to illustrate the need for less linear and more properly contextualised approaches to the concept and phenomenon of digital divides where technology, society and politics will be jointed taken into consideration to explain divides. It specifically proposes that digital divides and their research be revisited so as to emphasise the critical role of socio-cultural and decision-making dynamics in structuring the adoption of ICT in both qualitative and quantitative terms. Thus, it argues that the web of cultural traits in a society, with their own gaps and disparities, as well as policy and regulation dynamics, are in a constant dialogue with technology, together influencing digital divides and entailing implications for other forms of divisions in society. |
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Keywords: |
Digital divides; Internet; ICT; technology; politics; culture; society |
College: |
Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |
Issue: |
2 |
Start Page: |
317 |
End Page: |
331 |