Downloading inclusion: a statistical analysis of young people's digital communication inequalities
In this article we quantitatively explore digital inequalities in the context of
the on-going transition toward a new communication landscape, defined by the
emergence of a mass self-communication system as well as of a new culture of
convergence around media consumption and production. Digital communication
inequalities arise when technological, socio-economic, cultural and institutional
factors influence active participation in this emerging communication system, a
process that is and will continue to be particularly relevant among the young.
While communication inequalities have been the object of much theoretical
and qualitative research, their statistical analysis remains unattended. We used
recent Eurostat micro-data to better understand how demographic, socioeconomic
and cultural factors affect communication inequalities in Europe,
performing a detailed statistical analysis on the Spanish case. We found that
the ability to contribute to the new media ecology by uploading self-created
content is significantly correlated to the activity of downloading online material,
an association that, at this stage, is more relevant than the one observed for
other factors. At one point, young European ‘‘downloaders’’ start to upload
and contribute, a cultural mechanism that is currently driving inclusion more
strongly than the socio-economic avenues that are normally considered in the
literature on the digital divide. In the conclusion of the study, we reflect on
the policy implications of these findings.
OLLE SANZ Esteve;
TURLEA Geomina;
2013-08-16
TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
JRC78647
1351-1610,
http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/ciej20,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC78647,
10.1080/13511610.2012.699652,
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