The farmer,the worker and the MP |
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Authors: | Luc Vodoz Mark Reinhard Barbara Pfister Giauque |
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Institution: | 1.Communauté d’études pour l’aménagement du territoire (C.E.A.T.), Ecole polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Suisse,Lausanne,Switzerland |
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Abstract: | The territorial dimension of the digital divide is usually considered as a phenomenon that penalizes the peripheral regions,
especially in terms of regional economic development. Taking into account the territorial networking of ICT (Information &
Communication Technologies) infrastructures—particularly high-speed networks—provides what is probably the principal reason
for such a perception. This is particularly true considering that the most-peripheral regions and those with the smallest
population densities are also the poorest in terms of ICT infrastructures. In Western countries, however, the digital divide
is no longer the result of network-related problems. Nowadays, the issue of the skills required to adequately exploit the
potential of ICT is at the forefront. Yet this evolution is likely to lead to an inversion of the inequalities between the
centre and the periphery, as populations without such skills—recent immigrants, the unemployed, the illiterate, people with
little education or on low incomes and other socially marginalized people—are generally concentrated in urban centres. Consequently,
the priority for reducing inequalities of access to ICT resources is no longer the provision of high-performance ICT infrastructures
for peripheral regions, but rather the implementation of continuing education and social action policies within the urban
centres. |
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