iPads, Free Data and Young Peoples’ Rights: Refractions from a Universal Access Model During the Pandemic

The United Nations deemed internet access to be of critical importance for human rights in 2016. In 2020, schools around the world closed during the COVID-19 pandemic. As schools were closed, inequities in internet access gained widespread public attention as many educational opportunities shifted o...

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Main Author: Karen Louise Smith
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Brock University 2021-05-01
Series:Studies in Social Justice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.library.brocku.ca/index.php/SSJ/article/view/2509
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author Karen Louise Smith
author_facet Karen Louise Smith
author_sort Karen Louise Smith
collection DOAJ
description The United Nations deemed internet access to be of critical importance for human rights in 2016. In 2020, schools around the world closed during the COVID-19 pandemic. As schools were closed, inequities in internet access gained widespread public attention as many educational opportunities shifted online. Amidst this shift, this paper analyzes an Ontario provincial announcement to provide 21,000 iPads and free data for young people (ages 4-18), during the pandemic. The closure of schools in Ontario, Canada, meant that young people and families who faced technological challenges, such as a lack of devices, stable and affordable internet connections, or sufficient data allowances, could experience barriers to their right to an education. This paper revisits a community informatics (CI) model of internet access, the Access Rainbow, to analyze attempts to operationalize the right to an education through technology in Ontario. In parallel to rights, however, the field of CI faces the ongoing presence of profit-oriented corporations within universal access efforts. This paper argues that socio-technical infrastructural elements of access to the internet became visible through the breakdown of the pandemic. Furthermore, it considers the multi-stakeholder efforts required to implement useful and effective access, where school boards responded in varied ways locally. The paper contributes the concept of refraction to offer continued theorization of a distributive paradigm and a rights-informed approach in community informatics against the backdrop of the pandemic, which could also act as an opening for privatization and disaster capitalism.
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spelling doaj.art-785a8d26b230487691fa0e19db1cf74c2022-12-21T19:50:49ZengBrock UniversityStudies in Social Justice1911-47882021-05-0115310.26522/ssj.v15i3.2509iPads, Free Data and Young Peoples’ Rights: Refractions from a Universal Access Model During the PandemicKaren Louise Smith0Brock UniversityThe United Nations deemed internet access to be of critical importance for human rights in 2016. In 2020, schools around the world closed during the COVID-19 pandemic. As schools were closed, inequities in internet access gained widespread public attention as many educational opportunities shifted online. Amidst this shift, this paper analyzes an Ontario provincial announcement to provide 21,000 iPads and free data for young people (ages 4-18), during the pandemic. The closure of schools in Ontario, Canada, meant that young people and families who faced technological challenges, such as a lack of devices, stable and affordable internet connections, or sufficient data allowances, could experience barriers to their right to an education. This paper revisits a community informatics (CI) model of internet access, the Access Rainbow, to analyze attempts to operationalize the right to an education through technology in Ontario. In parallel to rights, however, the field of CI faces the ongoing presence of profit-oriented corporations within universal access efforts. This paper argues that socio-technical infrastructural elements of access to the internet became visible through the breakdown of the pandemic. Furthermore, it considers the multi-stakeholder efforts required to implement useful and effective access, where school boards responded in varied ways locally. The paper contributes the concept of refraction to offer continued theorization of a distributive paradigm and a rights-informed approach in community informatics against the backdrop of the pandemic, which could also act as an opening for privatization and disaster capitalism.https://journals.library.brocku.ca/index.php/SSJ/article/view/2509digital divideinternetyouthrightscommunity informatics
spellingShingle Karen Louise Smith
iPads, Free Data and Young Peoples’ Rights: Refractions from a Universal Access Model During the Pandemic
Studies in Social Justice
digital divide
internet
youth
rights
community informatics
title iPads, Free Data and Young Peoples’ Rights: Refractions from a Universal Access Model During the Pandemic
title_full iPads, Free Data and Young Peoples’ Rights: Refractions from a Universal Access Model During the Pandemic
title_fullStr iPads, Free Data and Young Peoples’ Rights: Refractions from a Universal Access Model During the Pandemic
title_full_unstemmed iPads, Free Data and Young Peoples’ Rights: Refractions from a Universal Access Model During the Pandemic
title_short iPads, Free Data and Young Peoples’ Rights: Refractions from a Universal Access Model During the Pandemic
title_sort ipads free data and young peoples rights refractions from a universal access model during the pandemic
topic digital divide
internet
youth
rights
community informatics
url https://journals.library.brocku.ca/index.php/SSJ/article/view/2509
work_keys_str_mv AT karenlouisesmith ipadsfreedataandyoungpeoplesrightsrefractionsfromauniversalaccessmodelduringthepandemic