Original article can be found at: http://www.herts.ac.uk/courses/schools-of-study/law/hertfordshire-law-journal/home.cfmIt is estimated that by 2007 the milestone of two billion mobile users will be achieved, with the three billion mark being claimed as a realistic target for 2010. This in turn bodes well for the goal of 50% access to telecommunications by 2015, set by the WSIS initiative. However the barrier appears to be a workable model for connecting these people to the network. The World Bank suggests that 77% of the world’s population already lives within range of a mobile network. Whilst most wealthy economic states have already been targeted and serviced, for the next stage to be accomplished growth must take place in other markets....
Gaps in the rates of digital inclusion continue to plague certain socio-economic segments of the Ame...
The purpose of dis paper was to investigate the nature of the inequalities in the usage of the inter...
[[abstract]]This article does not assume that the telephone system, much less a digital broadband ne...
Original article can be found at: http://www.emeraldinsight.com Copyright Emerald Group Publishing L...
The second stage of the World Summit on Information Society (WSIS) in November 2005 resolved to tack...
In contrary to the common argument that the digital access divide is quickly closing and that the fo...
The current path of digital technology innovation is seen as inevitable and good for the economy and...
Since the advent of the Internet, the concept of the "Digital Divide," has been at the forefront of ...
Technology experts and activists have for years attempted to bridge the gap between those with acces...
Many have argued that inequalities of access to the Internet in an information-driven society pose a...
A tremendous disparity exists between the few countries with expansive access to information and co...
The federal universal service scheme is designed to ensure that everyone has affordable access to ad...
For more than 100 years, the United States has used a variety of policy tools to encourage and ensur...
With Internet access increasingly a vital element of day to day life, this paper explores the concep...
Mobile Internet is growing around the world, bypassing the poor legacy of wired infrastructure. This...
Gaps in the rates of digital inclusion continue to plague certain socio-economic segments of the Ame...
The purpose of dis paper was to investigate the nature of the inequalities in the usage of the inter...
[[abstract]]This article does not assume that the telephone system, much less a digital broadband ne...
Original article can be found at: http://www.emeraldinsight.com Copyright Emerald Group Publishing L...
The second stage of the World Summit on Information Society (WSIS) in November 2005 resolved to tack...
In contrary to the common argument that the digital access divide is quickly closing and that the fo...
The current path of digital technology innovation is seen as inevitable and good for the economy and...
Since the advent of the Internet, the concept of the "Digital Divide," has been at the forefront of ...
Technology experts and activists have for years attempted to bridge the gap between those with acces...
Many have argued that inequalities of access to the Internet in an information-driven society pose a...
A tremendous disparity exists between the few countries with expansive access to information and co...
The federal universal service scheme is designed to ensure that everyone has affordable access to ad...
For more than 100 years, the United States has used a variety of policy tools to encourage and ensur...
With Internet access increasingly a vital element of day to day life, this paper explores the concep...
Mobile Internet is growing around the world, bypassing the poor legacy of wired infrastructure. This...
Gaps in the rates of digital inclusion continue to plague certain socio-economic segments of the Ame...
The purpose of dis paper was to investigate the nature of the inequalities in the usage of the inter...
[[abstract]]This article does not assume that the telephone system, much less a digital broadband ne...