Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Digital citizenship in later life: insights from participatory action research with older content creators

Reuter, Arlind LU orcid (2021)
Abstract
Within the context of rapid digitalisation of societies, older people increasingly require digital skills to participate civically. However, research has largely overlooked the digital dimension of older adults’ civic participation. Grounding my research in Serrat and colleagues’ (2019) later life civic participation framework, I explored digital content creation and community radio as pathways to increased civic participation and digital engagement in later life. Working collaboratively with older adults using participatory action research (PAR), I locate older adults’ digital citizenship at the intersection of Gerontology and Human-Computer Interaction research. Using qualitative methods, I explored: 1) an older people’s organisation’s... (More)
Within the context of rapid digitalisation of societies, older people increasingly require digital skills to participate civically. However, research has largely overlooked the digital dimension of older adults’ civic participation. Grounding my research in Serrat and colleagues’ (2019) later life civic participation framework, I explored digital content creation and community radio as pathways to increased civic participation and digital engagement in later life. Working collaboratively with older adults using participatory action research (PAR), I locate older adults’ digital citizenship at the intersection of Gerontology and Human-Computer Interaction research. Using qualitative methods, I explored: 1) an older people’s organisation’s media output as part of their age-friendly efforts, and 2) community radio production as a pathway to increased digital participation in later life. Both research strands, interwoven in a process of PAR, shed light on older adults’ digital citizenship. My collaboration with the older people’s organisation exemplifies a collective social civic activity organised by older adults themselves. Findings highlight the importance of older adults as active contributors in digitalised societies. My collaboration with older radio show hosts and other stakeholders, brought together at a radio festival, evolved into the Later Life Audio and Radio Co-operative. Findings demonstrate the importance of community radio to facilitate age-inclusive citizen dialogue and highlight how digital technologies can support communities of practice in bridging collective social and political forms of civic participation in later life. I reflect on my PAR journey, highlighting the process of doing research within an evolving ecosystem of individuals, third sector organisations and technologies, especially throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. I discuss the contributions of my research to current debates on older adults’ civic participation and propose a digital citizenship perspective rooted in community-based research, outlining implications for policy and practice to prioritise the concept of digital participation to support older adults’ civic participation online. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
b6e81c8b-9726-4e58-898a-ab939d407aaa
alternative location
http://theses.ncl.ac.uk/jspui/handle/10443/5588
date added to LUP
2022-04-01 10:47:14
date last changed
2023-12-07 15:48:52
@phdthesis{b6e81c8b-9726-4e58-898a-ab939d407aaa,
  abstract     = {{Within the context of rapid digitalisation of societies, older people increasingly require digital skills to participate civically. However, research has largely overlooked the digital dimension of older adults’ civic participation. Grounding my research in Serrat and colleagues’ (2019) later life civic participation framework, I explored digital content creation and community radio as pathways to increased civic participation and digital engagement in later life. Working collaboratively with older adults using participatory action research (PAR), I locate older adults’ digital citizenship at the intersection of Gerontology and Human-Computer Interaction research. Using qualitative methods, I explored: 1) an older people’s organisation’s media output as part of their age-friendly efforts, and 2) community radio production as a pathway to increased digital participation in later life. Both research strands, interwoven in a process of PAR, shed light on older adults’ digital citizenship. My collaboration with the older people’s organisation exemplifies a collective social civic activity organised by older adults themselves. Findings highlight the importance of older adults as active contributors in digitalised societies. My collaboration with older radio show hosts and other stakeholders, brought together at a radio festival, evolved into the Later Life Audio and Radio Co-operative. Findings demonstrate the importance of community radio to facilitate age-inclusive citizen dialogue and highlight how digital technologies can support communities of practice in bridging collective social and political forms of civic participation in later life. I reflect on my PAR journey, highlighting the process of doing research within an evolving ecosystem of individuals, third sector organisations and technologies, especially throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. I discuss the contributions of my research to current debates on older adults’ civic participation and propose a digital citizenship perspective rooted in community-based research, outlining implications for policy and practice to prioritise the concept of digital participation to support older adults’ civic participation online.}},
  author       = {{Reuter, Arlind}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Digital citizenship in later life: insights from participatory action research with older content creators}},
  url          = {{http://theses.ncl.ac.uk/jspui/handle/10443/5588}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}