Refers to the descriptive term indicative of the degree of quality and quantity of content, of information, and of technological hardware and software readily accessible and directly present in circulation within a given population, geographical region, system ecology, symbiotic environment, or collaborative circumstance; in the general case, delineative of between adequate and detrimentally under par availability of and access to online resources and the latest digital Information and Communication Technologies.
Published in Chapter:
The Politics of Access to Information: Exploring the Development of Software Platforms and Communications Hardware in the Digital Age
Shefali Virkar (University of Oxford, UK)
Copyright: © 2015
|Pages: 33
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-4666-8505-5.ch012
Abstract
Over the last few decades, unprecedented advances in communications technology have collapsed vast spatial and temporal differences, and made it possible for people to form connections in a manner not thought possible before. Centred chiefly on information, this revolution has transformed the way in which people around the world think, work, share, and communicate. Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) promise a future of a highly interconnected world, wherein action is not limited by physical boundaries, and constrained physical space is replaced by a virtual ‘cyberspace' not subject to traditional hierarchies and power relations. But is the promise of ICTs chimerical? To tackle these issues, central to the global policy debate over the potential development contributions of Information and Communication Technologies, and to examine whether and the extent to which disparities in access to ICTs exist, this book chapter provides a demonstration of the ways in which ICTs may be used as tools to further global economic, social, and political advancement, to shape actor behaviour, and to enhance institutional functioning; particularly in the Third World.