While a digital divide remains evident in many remote Indigenous Australian communities, individual and collective information and communication technologies practices have developed in accordance with broadband, satellite or WiFi availability. This article examines the ways in which Indigenous youth in remote Australia are 'coming of age' in contexts where digitally-mediated social interaction is a taken-for-granted aspect of social practice, communication and learning. While there are many positive aspects to this rapid development, it can also lead to intergenerational tensions as young people explore new patterns of behaviour, and older people come to terms with new cultural challenges. Drawing on long-term ethnographic observations in ...
Twenty-four Indigenous adolescents (mean age 16.4 years) attending a boarding school in a remote reg...
Internet on the Outstation provides a new take on the digital divide. Why do whole communities choos...
Internet on the Outstation provides a new take on the digital divide. Why do whole communities choos...
The rapid development of new information and communications technologies, an increase in affordable,...
For most Indigenous people in central and northern Australia the encounter with the western world ha...
A remote Aboriginal community has adopted the online digital landscape in today’s globalised culture...
Indigenous Australians living in remote areas have little access to the Internet and make little use...
Indigenous Australians living in remote areas have little access to the Internet and make little use...
The incorporation of mobile phones and social media by Indigenous youth (Senior and Chenhall, 2016; ...
This paper presents the early findings, observations and lessons learned through storywork with an A...
This paper reports on the findings of a research project commissioned by the Department of Communica...
The digital divide between Indigenous and other Australians describes the unequal access to informat...
The digital divide between Indigenous and other Australians describes the unequal access to informat...
It's well understood the digital divide disproportionately affects people living in regional Austral...
A high proportion of Aboriginal Australians residing in remote communities are mobile-only internet ...
Twenty-four Indigenous adolescents (mean age 16.4 years) attending a boarding school in a remote reg...
Internet on the Outstation provides a new take on the digital divide. Why do whole communities choos...
Internet on the Outstation provides a new take on the digital divide. Why do whole communities choos...
The rapid development of new information and communications technologies, an increase in affordable,...
For most Indigenous people in central and northern Australia the encounter with the western world ha...
A remote Aboriginal community has adopted the online digital landscape in today’s globalised culture...
Indigenous Australians living in remote areas have little access to the Internet and make little use...
Indigenous Australians living in remote areas have little access to the Internet and make little use...
The incorporation of mobile phones and social media by Indigenous youth (Senior and Chenhall, 2016; ...
This paper presents the early findings, observations and lessons learned through storywork with an A...
This paper reports on the findings of a research project commissioned by the Department of Communica...
The digital divide between Indigenous and other Australians describes the unequal access to informat...
The digital divide between Indigenous and other Australians describes the unequal access to informat...
It's well understood the digital divide disproportionately affects people living in regional Austral...
A high proportion of Aboriginal Australians residing in remote communities are mobile-only internet ...
Twenty-four Indigenous adolescents (mean age 16.4 years) attending a boarding school in a remote reg...
Internet on the Outstation provides a new take on the digital divide. Why do whole communities choos...
Internet on the Outstation provides a new take on the digital divide. Why do whole communities choos...