Thursday, March 1, 2012

COMMUNICATION-U.S.: RACIAL DIVIDE FOUND IN COMPUTER, INTERNET USE

Jim Lobe
Inter Press Service English News Wire
04-20-1998
WASHINGTON, Apr. 19 (IPS) -- More than 40 years after the U.S.
Supreme Court ordered an end to racially-segregated public schools,
there is a new divide between White and Black Americans - on the
access to computers and use of the Internet.
According to a survey published in the latest 'Science'
magazine, Whites own, and are using, computers in substantially
greater numbers than African Americans, particularly for
lower-income families of both groups.
White families earning less than 40,000 dollars a year were
nearly six times more likely to have used the Internet in the week
before the survey was taken - in early 1997 - than black families
of comparable income, according to the survey - the first of its
kind in the United States.
"The consequences to U.S. society of a persistent racial divide
on the Internet may be severe," according to the survey's authors,
Donna Hoffman and Thomas Novak of Vanderbilt University in
Nashville, Tennessee. "Employment opportunities and income
differences among Whites and African Americans may be exacerbated,
with further negative consequences to the nation's cities."
Particularly worrisome is the racial divide in computer
ownership among high school and college students. Almost three out
of every four white students surveyed owned a home computer; by
contrast, only one of every three black students owned a computer.
Ownership, according to the authors, translates directly into
access to the Internet where traffic is roughly doubling every 100
days. "This is the most disturbing instance yet of when race
matters in Internet access," the authors say. "If you want to be
a fully functional member of society, you're going to have to have
access to the Internet," Hoffman said. "Anybody poor is in trouble
here. But if you're poor and black, you're really in trouble with
respect to access."
Beyond race, income is a key variable in computer access and
use, according to the survey. Black families earning more than
40,000 dollars year were actually more likely to own computers than
comparable white families: 65.4 percent and 61.2 percent,
respectively. Upper-income black and white households also used the
Internet at comparable rates.
The fact that income makes a substantial difference in computer
ownership bolsters the notion that changes in technology may be
benefitting the wealthier segments of the population, leading to
a so-called "digital divide" between the information "haves" and
"have-nots," the report notes. But race remains a key factor as
well, because only about one third of all black households fall
into the upper-income category.
Thus, among families of all income levels, 44.3 percent of white
households own computers, compared with only 29 percent of black
households, according to the survey.
When it came to student ownership, race also made a difference,
regardless of income. Some 73 percent of white students owned a
home computer, compared to only 32 percent of black students - a
gap which persisted when household income was considered. African-
Americans constitute roughly 12 percent of the U.S. population of
more than 260 million people. According to recent surveys, about
one-tenth of the entire U.S. population - or some 25 million people
- have used the Internet in the past week alone.
As of January, 1997, the latest survey estimates that about 5.2
million Blacks had used the Web at some time. The comparable figure
for whites was about 46 million. Whites, however, were
significantly more likely to have used the Web at home, where
African Americans were more likely to have used it at school.
White students without a computer at home were also more than
twice as likely as similar African American students to have used
the Web within the past six months, according to the survey which
concluded that white students appear to be gaining access to the
Internet at the homes of their friends or relatives, libraries, and
community centers. That finding points to ways to close the racial
gap, according to the authors, who urge government to create new
access points for Blacks in local libraries, community centers and
other non-traditional places.
The Science survey also found that African Americans are very
much aware of the Internet and its potential importance and want
to gain access. Its conclusion that some five million African
Americans have used the Web as of a year ago - give times the
number estimated by the popular press - is also reason for some
optimism, if only because such a large audience will likely
generate more on-line content directed toward Blacks.
The authors argue that the recent commercial success of
computers priced below 1000 dollars could spur much greater
ownership in the African-American community. They also call for
programs that encourage ownership and the adoption and marketing
of inexpensive devices designed to offer access through
televisions.

Copyright 1998 IPS/GIN. The contents of this story can not be duplicated in any fashion without written permission of Global Information Network

No comments:

Post a Comment