In 2013, a series of posters began appearing in Washington, DC’s Metro system. Each declared “The internet: Your future depends on it” next to a photo of a middle-aged black Washingtonian, and an advertisement for the municipal government’s digital training resources. This hopeful discourse is familiar but where exactly does it come from? And how are our public institutions reorganized to approach the problem of poverty as a problem of technology? The Clinton administration’s ‘digital divide’ policy program popularized this hopeful discourse about personal computing powering social mobility, positioned internet startups as the ‘right’ side of the divide, and charged institutions of social reproduction such as schools and libraries with cl...
As the world moved online in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, 19 million Americans fell behind. I...
Where does the emancipatory, entrepreneurial hope in personal computing inherent to the digital divi...
It seems that the years of mankind struggle against poverty have ended to a symbolic belief: "W...
In the information era inequality is increasingly dictated by a myriad of issues related to both acc...
Digital technological innovation is taken by many to signify societal progress and the promise of eq...
We contend that as Internet penetration increases, students of inequality of access to the new infor...
Harnessing scholarship focused on literacy and poverty, in this article we aim to complicate the com...
In the information era inequality is increasingly dictated by a myriad of issues related to both acc...
The arrival of the so-called information society—and with its recent ‘leap of faith ’ in the Interne...
This paper argues that over-reliance on a distributive paradigm in community informatics practice ha...
Many have argued that inequalities of access to the Internet in an information-driven society pose a...
The digital divide has now been analyzed for over a decade. Many in the field believe it is time to ...
The digital revolution has transformed the lives of many, but also has left untouched the lives of m...
This paper describes the theoretical underpinnings of an ongoing research project that is examining ...
In The Promise of Access: Technology, Inequality, and the Political Economy of Hope, Daniel Greene p...
As the world moved online in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, 19 million Americans fell behind. I...
Where does the emancipatory, entrepreneurial hope in personal computing inherent to the digital divi...
It seems that the years of mankind struggle against poverty have ended to a symbolic belief: "W...
In the information era inequality is increasingly dictated by a myriad of issues related to both acc...
Digital technological innovation is taken by many to signify societal progress and the promise of eq...
We contend that as Internet penetration increases, students of inequality of access to the new infor...
Harnessing scholarship focused on literacy and poverty, in this article we aim to complicate the com...
In the information era inequality is increasingly dictated by a myriad of issues related to both acc...
The arrival of the so-called information society—and with its recent ‘leap of faith ’ in the Interne...
This paper argues that over-reliance on a distributive paradigm in community informatics practice ha...
Many have argued that inequalities of access to the Internet in an information-driven society pose a...
The digital divide has now been analyzed for over a decade. Many in the field believe it is time to ...
The digital revolution has transformed the lives of many, but also has left untouched the lives of m...
This paper describes the theoretical underpinnings of an ongoing research project that is examining ...
In The Promise of Access: Technology, Inequality, and the Political Economy of Hope, Daniel Greene p...
As the world moved online in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, 19 million Americans fell behind. I...
Where does the emancipatory, entrepreneurial hope in personal computing inherent to the digital divi...
It seems that the years of mankind struggle against poverty have ended to a symbolic belief: "W...