Saturday, April 17, 2010

Where can I find statistics on the digital divide?

According to Van Dijk in "The Deepening Divide" one of the groups of people who are affected are parents of small children. I'm doing a project for school and I have to find a way to bridge the gap and I chose to do parents of small children, but I can't find anything about it except for in Van Dijk's book and I need to find graphs and statistics online. Oh ya and it's due tomorrow haha. What? I'm not a procrastinator.....

Where can I find statistics on the digital divide?
Check out some of the white papers available on this website...very good information:
Reply:Digital Inequality: From Unequal Access to Differentiated Use [click for pdf copy of a final draft of the full paper]





by Paul DiMaggio, Eszter Hargittai, Coral Celeste and Steven Shafer





2004. In Social Inequality. Edited by Kathryn Neckerman. New York: Russell Sage Foundation. pp. 355-400.





(Send me a note if you'd like to receive a hard copy of the final chapter through snail mail.)





Abstract


This paper reviews what we know about inequality in access to and use of new digital technologies. Until recently, most research has focused on inequality in access (the "digital divide"), measured in a variety of ways. We agree that inequality of access is important, because it is likely to reinforce inequality in opportunities for economic mobility and social participation. At the same time we argue that a more thorough understanding of digital inequality requires placing Internet access in a broader theoretical context, and asking a wider range of questions about the impact of information technologies and informational goods on social inequality. In particular, five key issues around which we structure this paper.


(1) The digital divide. Who has access to the Internet, who does not have access, and how has this changed?


(2) Is access to and use of the Internet more or less unequal than access to and use of other forms of information technology?


(3) Inequality among persons with access to the Internet.


(4) Does access to and use of the Internet affect people's life chances


(5) How might the changing technology, regulatory environment and industrial organization of the Internet render obsolete the findings reported hear?





Outline


I. Introduction








A brief history of the Internet





Technology and inequality: a selective tour of social-scientific perspectives


II. The Digital Divide





Persistent disagreement





What do we mean by access?





Which divide?





Which measures?





Interpreting the trends





The digital divide: a research agenda


III. How Does Online Inequality compare to Inequality in the Use of Other Media?





Comparing Media Sources: A Research Agenda


IV. Beyond the Digital Divide: Inequality Online





Culture and information in the stratification order





The "Knowledge Gap" hypothesis





Dimensions of inequality online





Research agenda: Modeling digital inequality


V. Does Internet Use Matter?





Do technical skills enhance earnings?





Do technical skills enhance quality of worklife?





Does technology improve school performance?





Does technology reduce inequality in the sphere of consumption?





Does technology enhance political influence and communicaty engagement?





Effects of Internet use: research agenda


VI. Social Organization of Technological Inequality





Government policies and Internet adoption





The impact of business strategies





Institutional effects on digital inequality: a research agenda


VII. Conclusion


Acknowledgements


Report prepared for the Russell Sage Foundation. Authors are from Princeton University except for Hargittai, who teaches at Northwestern University. Support from the Russell Sage Foundation, the National Science Foundation (grant IIS0086143) and the Markle Foundation is gratefully acknowledged, as is institutional support from the Princeton Center for Arts and Cultural Policy Studies and Office of Population Research. This paper refelcts the impact on the first author's thinking of several helpful and provocative comments by participants at the Russell Sage Foundation Inequality project's Harvard meeting in Summer 2001.


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