IRMA-International.org: Creator of Knowledge
Information Resources Management Association
Advancing the Concepts & Practices of Information Resources Management in Modern Organizations

Why the Institutional Access Digital Divide Might Be More Significant than the Home Broadband Divide

Why the Institutional Access Digital Divide Might Be More Significant than the Home Broadband Divide
View Sample PDF
Author(s): Christopher McConnell (University of Texas at Austin, USA)and Joseph Straubhaar (The University of Texas at Austin, USA)
Copyright: 2016
Pages: 20
Source title: Handbook of Research on Comparative Approaches to the Digital Age Revolution in Europe and the Americas
Source Author(s)/Editor(s): Brasilina Passarelli (School of Communications and Arts, University of São Paulo, Brazil), Joseph Straubhaar (The University of Texas at Austin, USA)and Aurora Cuevas-Cerveró (Complutense University of Madrid, Spain)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-8740-0.ch005

Purchase

View Why the Institutional Access Digital Divide Might Be More Significant than the Home Broadband Divide on the publisher's website for pricing and purchasing information.

Abstract

Digital-inclusion policy in the United States has historically emphasized home broadband access as both its policy priority and goal. Supplying households with broadband access may not do much to improve the ability of individuals to make meaningful use of the Internet, however, since it provides Internet access with little social context beyond the family. Drawing on Bourdieu's concepts of disposition, habitus, and multiple forms of capital, this paper endeavors to situate Internet use in its broader social context and explores the importance of institutional access, Internet use at work or school, in developing the dispositions and competencies needed to use the Internet in instrumental ways, such as applying for educational programs or communicating with governments. Through descriptive statistics, it identifies which segments of a US city lack institutional access, and, using multivariate analysis, it highlights the role institutional access plays in developing these abilities and its role in further inequality.

Related Content

Maja Pucelj, Matjaž Mulej, Anita Hrast. © 2024. 29 pages.
Hemendra Singh. © 2024. 26 pages.
Nestor Soler del Toro. © 2024. 27 pages.
Pablo Banchio. © 2024. 18 pages.
Jože Ruparčič. © 2024. 26 pages.
Anuttama Ghose, Hartej Singh Kochher, S. M. Aamir Ali. © 2024. 28 pages.
Bhupinder Singh, Komal Vig, Pushan Kumar Dutta, Christian Kaunert, Bhupendra Kumar Gautam. © 2024. 23 pages.
Body Bottom