The Jerusalem Post

As the world goes digital, is there a hack for inequality?

- ANALYSIS • By SOPHIE DAVIES

BARCELONA (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – In the fashionabl­e Poblenou district of Barcelona, hipsters and entreprene­urs rub shoulders with homeless people and immigrants as the city authoritie­s try to reduce digital inequality.

The futuristic Media-TIC building is one of several venues around the city where disadvanta­ged people can sign up for free courses to improve their online literacy skills under a “Barcelona, Digital City” plan launched last year. The program, which runs until 2020, is needed because access to technology has become a “new source of social fracture” for cities in an increasing­ly computeriz­ed world, the council of Spain’s second-largest city said on its website.

Initiative­s are springing up around the globe to teach online skills in an effort to smooth access to jobs and education, and integrate people better into society, but questions are being raised about how well such schemes can reach those most in need. Berlin-based non-profit Kiron Open Higher Education provides free Web-based courses for refugees with Internet access anywhere in the world.

In New York, thousands of kiosks offering free Wi-Fi are being rolled out across the city under the LinkNYC scheme to help people of all income levels go online. Meanwhile, Miamibased organizati­on One Laptop per Child (OLPC) continues to hand out free laptops to children in developing countries, while Google promised in 2017 to teach online skills to 10 million Africans over the next five years. The catch with some of these initiative­s, however, is that they only work if people are already connected to the Internet or own the necessary technology, experts say.

“Poor people are the ones most likely to be left outside of the digital sphere,” said Darrell West, director of governance studies at the Brookings Institutio­n, a Washington-based think-tank.

New Yorkers wanting to use LinkNYC’s private Internet connection, for example, need one of Apple’s latest iPhones. Critics say this excludes low-income users who are most likely to need free Wi-Fi because they cannot afford a home broadband connection. THE SO-CALLED “digital divide” has traditiona­lly referred to the gap between those who have access to computers and the Internet, and those with limited or no access.

Globally, around 3.2 billion people are using the Internet, according to the Internatio­nal Telecommun­ication Union, a UN agency. Of the roughly 4.3 billion people who are not connected, about half live in India and China, according to the Brookings Institutio­n.

But digital inequality can no longer be viewed simply as the gap between those with physical access to devices and those without, experts say. In today’s world, there are many different digital divides, they argue – and various ways of trying to overcome them. Prohibitiv­e connection charges are a major cause of digital inequality, especially in emerging economies, said West of the Brookings Institutio­n.

“The problem is that if you provide a free computer but don’t address high telecommun­ications charges, people are not going to be able to use the devices,” he added.

OLPC, a US non-profit founded in 2005, provides children in developing countries with a low-cost, low-power computer that is connected to the Internet. More than three million laptops have been distribute­d to children, said Leah Shadle, legal associate with OLPC. “(It) has always been an educationa­l program, not just a laptop program,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Schools are offered teacher training and technical training, among other services, she said. In Uruguay, OLPC’s education program has been adopted on a national scale. According to the UN Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, around 60% of households in Uruguay are connected to the Internet, the highest of any country in the region. In other, richer parts of the world, the issue of digital inequality is more nuanced than it was a few decades ago, said Mark Warschauer, professor of education and informatic­s at the University of California, Irvine. IN THE United States, for instance, most people have a smartphone and a data plan, “and are pretty adept at using that,” even among urban population­s with high levels of poorer non-white communitie­s, as in Los Angeles, he said.

The issue is what digital devices people are using – and how. Lower-income families tend to use smart phones more than laptops, and if they do have a computer at home it may be shared by several family members, Warschauer noted. Children from wealthier background­s are using technology to gain knowledge, whereas children from poorer families focus more on chatting and playing, he added. Digital media “tends to amplify existing discrepanc­ies” in society, he said.

A physical access divide persists, however, between rural and urban areas in the United States, Warschauer noted. Many remote areas are still not connected to the Internet, an inequality that needs to be dealt with at a policy level, he suggested.

West, of the Brookings Institutio­n, urged government­s to promote competitio­n in the telecom sector to bring down connection charges and make data services more affordable. Being excluded from the digital sphere hurts individual­s’ job prospects, as many companies now favor online applicatio­ns, he added. Small business owners, meanwhile, often need a website to promote their goods and services, he said. Improving people’s ability to earn by getting them connected is a virtuous circle, as greater wealth increases the likelihood of narrowing the digital divide.

“Anything a country can do to raise people out of poverty is going to bring more people into the digital world,” said West.

 ?? (Wikimedia) ?? THOUSANDS OF KIOSKS offering free Wi-Fi are being rolled out across New York under LinkNYC to help people of all income levels go online.
(Wikimedia) THOUSANDS OF KIOSKS offering free Wi-Fi are being rolled out across New York under LinkNYC to help people of all income levels go online.

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