Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Remaining divides : Access to and use of ICTs among elderly citizens

Olsson, Tobias LU and Viscovi, Dino (2016) In Researching and Teaching Communication Book Series 11. p.273-286
Abstract
The ambition to make all kinds of societal services, public as well as commercial ones, more effective and accessible via online applications is reoccurring all over the western world. To a large extent, such ambitions hold the promise to make citizens’ everyday lives easier, but they are, however, also problematic in that they presuppose a number of important prerequisites. They presuppose widespread access to ICT-applications of a standard that is fast and solid enough to manage to make users actually make use of these services. They further presuppose that all citizens and consumers, who are the inscribed users of these applications, have enough competences and skills to make use of them. Hence, there is an obvious risk that people who... (More)
The ambition to make all kinds of societal services, public as well as commercial ones, more effective and accessible via online applications is reoccurring all over the western world. To a large extent, such ambitions hold the promise to make citizens’ everyday lives easier, but they are, however, also problematic in that they presuppose a number of important prerequisites. They presuppose widespread access to ICT-applications of a standard that is fast and solid enough to manage to make users actually make use of these services. They further presuppose that all citizens and consumers, who are the inscribed users of these applications, have enough competences and skills to make use of them. Hence, there is an obvious risk that people who do not have access are being left behind in the transformations of these services from analogue to digital. In this chapter we attend to these risks by paying attention to contemporary patterns of access to, and use of, digital applications. The chapter is inspired by domestication theory and looks into and analyses different patterns of ICT access and use among Swedish senior citizens, with the following questions in mind: What ICT-devices do various groups of senior citizens have access to? To what extent do they make everyday use of them? For what purposes do they use these devices? The empirical material has been derived from a pilot survey which was conducted from August to September 2015. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
ICT-access, ICT-use, senior citizens, domestication, pilot study
host publication
Politics, Civil Society and Participation : Media and Communications in Transforming Environment - Media and Communications in Transforming Environment
series title
Researching and Teaching Communication Book Series
editor
Kramp, Leif ; Carpentier, Nico ; Hepp, Andreas ; Kilborn, Richard ; Kunelius, Risto ; Nieminen, Hannu ; Olsson, Tobias ; Pruulmann-Vengerfeldt, Pille ; Tomanic Trivundza, Ilija and Tosoni, Simone
volume
11
pages
14 pages
publisher
edition lumière
ISSN
1736-4752
1736-3918
ISBN
978-3-943245-54-7
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
bd28c176-a9c6-47b3-81af-db3d773fd40b
alternative location
http://www.researchingcommunication.eu/C18_book11.html
date added to LUP
2016-09-21 13:48:00
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:26:02
@inbook{bd28c176-a9c6-47b3-81af-db3d773fd40b,
  abstract     = {{The ambition to make all kinds of societal services, public as well as commercial ones, more effective and accessible via online applications is reoccurring all over the western world. To a large extent, such ambitions hold the promise to make citizens’ everyday lives easier, but they are, however, also problematic in that they presuppose a number of important prerequisites. They presuppose widespread access to ICT-applications of a standard that is fast and solid enough to manage to make users actually make use of these services. They further presuppose that all citizens and consumers, who are the inscribed users of these applications, have enough competences and skills to make use of them. Hence, there is an obvious risk that people who do not have access are being left behind in the transformations of these services from analogue to digital. In this chapter we attend to these risks by paying attention to contemporary patterns of access to, and use of, digital applications. The chapter is inspired by domestication theory and looks into and analyses different patterns of ICT access and use among Swedish senior citizens, with the following questions in mind: What ICT-devices do various groups of senior citizens have access to? To what extent do they make everyday use of them? For what purposes do they use these devices? The empirical material has been derived from a pilot survey which was conducted from August to September 2015.}},
  author       = {{Olsson, Tobias and Viscovi, Dino}},
  booktitle    = {{Politics, Civil Society and Participation : Media and Communications in Transforming Environment}},
  editor       = {{Kramp, Leif and Carpentier, Nico and Hepp, Andreas and Kilborn, Richard and Kunelius, Risto and Nieminen, Hannu and Olsson, Tobias and Pruulmann-Vengerfeldt, Pille and Tomanic Trivundza, Ilija and Tosoni, Simone}},
  isbn         = {{978-3-943245-54-7}},
  issn         = {{1736-4752}},
  keywords     = {{ICT-access; ICT-use; senior citizens; domestication; pilot study}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{273--286}},
  publisher    = {{edition lumière}},
  series       = {{Researching and Teaching Communication Book Series}},
  title        = {{Remaining divides : Access to and use of ICTs among elderly citizens}},
  url          = {{http://www.researchingcommunication.eu/C18_book11.html}},
  volume       = {{11}},
  year         = {{2016}},
}