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=Access and Participation Inequalities: Implications for Online Communities= | |||
This event will day place '''May 19, 2023 at 10:00am PT (18:00-UTC)'''. It will feature '''Professor Hernan Galperin''' (University of Southern California) and '''Floor Fiers''' (Northwestern University). [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSd7lANLuspnHRm56zMuQg9ln0q5SNst6ngRqAcYdXT5_Tjn_A/viewform?usp=sf_link Register now!] | This event will day place '''May 19, 2023 at 10:00am PT (18:00-UTC)'''. It will feature '''Professor Hernan Galperin''' (University of Southern California) and '''Floor Fiers''' (Northwestern University). [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSd7lANLuspnHRm56zMuQg9ln0q5SNst6ngRqAcYdXT5_Tjn_A/viewform?usp=sf_link Register now!] | ||
Revision as of 11:46, 10 May 2023
Access and Participation Inequalities: Implications for Online Communities
This event will day place May 19, 2023 at 10:00am PT (18:00-UTC). It will feature Professor Hernan Galperin (University of Southern California) and Floor Fiers (Northwestern University). Register now!
How can communities address and understand challenges around digital access and participation inequalities? Online participation is differentiated and unequal along almost every dimension—in terms of who gets online and how as well as in terms of who contributes or participates in specific activities once they are there. There is also evidence of unequal outcomes linked to individual characteristics, which can be exacerbated by platform design and policies. In this session, we will explore this topic and its implications for online communities and platforms.
First, Professor Hernan Galperin (University of Southern California) will discuss how participation in online communities is affected by differences in broadband access opportunities and modalities across populations. Prof. Galperin will then present findings from a series of studies that investigate the drivers of inequality in gig economy platforms in the Global South. A key theme will be how to identify and combat digital discrimination in access and outcomes.
Next, Floor Fiers (Northwestern) will discuss participation inequalities in a particular online context: the gig economy. As online marketplaces, gig platforms mediate access to opportunities to exchange labor and money. Questions of who is and who is not able to access and navigate such platforms have important consequences. In addition, a variety of digital skills may be needed to overcome barriers to participation in these and other settings. Recent findings illustrate how having awareness of what is possible in a gig platform is a prerequisite to building the skills to reap potential benefits of participation. What might opportunities look like to bridge such knowledge, participation, and skills gaps?