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Digital inequalities 3.0: Emergent inequalities in the information age

  • Laura Robinson
  • , Jeremy Schulz
  • , Hopeton S. Dunn
  • , Antonio A. Casilli
  • , Paola Tubaro
  • , Rod Carveth
  • , Wenhong Chen
  • , Julie B. Wiest
  • , Matías Dodel
  • , Michael J. Stern
  • , Christopher Ball
  • , Kuo Ting Huang
  • , Grant Blank
  • , Massimo Ragnedda
  • , Hiroshi Ono
  • , Bernie Hogan
  • , Gustavo Mesch
  • , Shelia R. Cotton
  • , Susan B. Kretchmer
  • , Timothy M. Hale
  • Tomasz Drabowicz, Pu Yan, Barry Wellman, Molly Gloria Harper, Anabel Quan-Haase, Aneka Khilnani
    • Santa Clara University
    • UC Berkeley Institute
    • University of Botswana
    • University of Johannesburg
    • The University of the West Indies
    • Interdisciplinary Institute on Innovation (i3)
    • Université Paris-Saclay
    • Morgan State University
    • University of Texas at Austin
    • University of Pennsylvania
    • Michigan State University
    • University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
    • Ball State University
    • University of Oxford
    • Northumbria University
    • Texas A&M University
    • Sociology Department
    • University of Haifa
    • Clemson University
    • Digital International Conferences series
    • University of Lodz
    • University of Toronto
    • Western University
    • George Washington University

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    157 Scopus citations

    Abstract

    Marking the 25th anniversary of the “digital divide,” we continue our metaphor of the digital inequality stack by mapping out the rapidly evolving nature of digital inequality using a broad lens. We tackle complex, and often unseen, inequalities spawned by the platform economy, automation, big data, algorithms, cybercrime, cybersafety, gaming, emotional well-being, assistive technologies, civic engagement, and mobility. These inequalities are woven throughout the digital inequality stack in many ways including differentiated access, use, consumption, literacies, skills, and production. While many users are competent prosumers who nimbly work within different layers of the stack, very few individuals are “full stack engineers” able to create or recreate digital devices, networks, and software platforms as pure producers. This new frontier of digital inequalities further differentiates digitally skilled creators from mere users. Therefore, we document emergent forms of inequality that radically diminish individuals’ agency and augment the power of technology creators, big tech, and other already powerful social actors whose dominance is increasing.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalFirst Monday
    Volume25
    Issue number7
    DOIs
    StatePublished - 6 Jul 2020

    UN SDGs

    This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

    1. SDG 16 - Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions
      SDG 16 Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions

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