Description
While government is digitally transforming the way in which it delivers services and communicates with citizens, this book reminds us that many are not likely to benefit from greater access to services, information, and government officials. The authors reconceptualize the information technology challenge facing society as a constellation of multiple divides involving access, skill, economic opportunity, and democratic political participation. Moreover, they draw on both a wealth of important data and rigorous analysis to demonstrate convincingly that persistent disparities in technology access and skill matter for economic opportunity and political participation, and that governments will have to fashion broader solutions to take full advantage of technology's social potential. -- Jane E. Fountain, associate professor of public policy and director of the National Center for Digital Government, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University Who should read Virtual Inequality? Students, teachers, journalists, policy analysts, government decision makers, community leaders and especially ordinary citizens should read it. The authors provide a concise and clear beacon for seeing and understanding the so-called digital divide not simply as a measurement of the gaps between those who have ready access to PCs and Internet connectivity and those who don't. Instead, they present and explain a much bigger, more complex, critical set of problems and issues regarding how the allocation of information and knowledge, political power and opportunity is defining the evolving Information Society of the 21st Century. They caution that beyond the term digital divide are issues about quality of life, democracy, exclusion and who gets what, when and under what circumstances. -- Nolan A. Bowie, senior fellow and adjunct lecturer in public policy, Harvard University Learning how to understand the impact of the Internet on civic life is one of the most important challenges facing us today. This book presents new insights and new data on virtual inequality and the digital divide. Anyone interested in how technology is reshaping democracy should read this book. -- Darrell West, professor of political science and public policy and director of the Taubman Center for Public Policy at Brown University Statistically rigorous and eminently readable, Mossberger, Tolbert and Stansbury have delivered a valuable, accessible contribution to digital divide literature. Virtual Inequality is chock full of insightful data, analysis and recommendations for policy makers. -- Amanda B. Lenhart, research specialist, Pew Internet & American Life Project
About the Author
Karen Mossberger is an associate professor of public administration, University of Illinois at Chicago and the author of The Politics of Ideas and the Spread of Enterprise Zones.Caroline J. Tolbert is an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at Kent State University, and co-editor of Citizens as Legislators:Direct Democracy in the United States. Mary Stansbury is associate professor & program chair, Library & Information Science, Morgridge College of Education, University of Denver
Book Information
ISBN 9780878409990
Author Karen Mossberger
Format Paperback
Page Count 208
Imprint Georgetown University Press
Publisher Georgetown University Press
Weight(grams) 295g