数字变革与边缘社区:边缘地区对数字媒体态度的改变

Gen Eickers, Matthias O. Rath
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引用次数: 0

摘要

边缘化社区面临着边缘化所导致的问题,如排斥、不被关注、虚假陈述和仇恨言论,这些问题不仅存在于线下,而且由于数字变革,越来越多地出现在网络上。我们的研究项目DigitalDialog21旨在评估数字变革对社会的影响,以及人们如何感知数字变革及其带来的风险和可能性。在这个项目中,数字变革被理解为社会变革的一个因素。通过调查数字变革及其对社会的影响,我们能够对社会如何发生社会变化以及在教育中需要做些什么来建立数字信任得出更普遍的推论。2017年,数字进化指数发现,在工业化程度较高和工业化程度较低的国家,对数字化的信任赤字和怀疑都在增加。我们将从这些观察中得出结论,并做出以下假设:似乎特别是在边缘化社区,即:在结构和系统上处于不利地位的社区,以及经历社会边缘化的社区,这种信任赤字和对数字化的怀疑是普遍存在的。这可能是因为,作为一个边缘化社区的成员,一个人可能很快就会发现边缘化所导致的问题在数字空间中存在,就像它们在非数字空间中存在一样。本文将批判性地研究边缘化社区对数字媒体的态度如何受到数字变革的影响。数字化的风险是否大于边缘化社区的优势?数字媒体是否被认为提供了诸如增加知名度和代表性等优势,还是被认为助长了对边缘人群的歧视?我们的研究项目将现有研究的二次分析与我们自己对边缘化人群对数字变革的看法的定性访谈研究的结果结合在一起。本文将描述一些示例访谈,从而分析边缘对数字媒体的态度是否以及如何变化,这种变化由什么组成,以及我们如何理解道德和教育框架内态度的变化。我们的研究结果将指出,有必要从早期教育开始,提高德国教育体系中基于道德的数字素养(PEAT)。必须通过面向问题的教育,赋予边缘化群体以数字化能力。独立的自我效能感可以在支离破碎的社会中增加数字信任。论文最后介绍了作为该项目的一部分正在开发的媒体伦理工具。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
DIGITAL CHANGE AND MARGINALIZED COMMUNITIES: CHANGING ATTITUDES TOWARDS DIGITAL MEDIA IN THE MARGINS
Marginalized communities are confronted with issues resulting from their marginalization, such as exclusion, invisibility, misrepresentation, and hate speech, not only offline but – due to digital change – increasingly online. Our research project DigitalDialog21 aims at evaluating the effects of digital change on society and how digital change, and the risks and possibilities that come with it, is perceived by the population. Digital change is understood as a factor of social change in this project. By investigating digital change and its effects on society, we are able to draw more general inferences on how societies change socially and what needs to be done in education to establish digital trust. In 2017 the Digital Evolution Index observed an increasing trust deficit and skepticism towards digitalization in both very industrialized and lesser industrialized countries. We will draw inferences from these observations here and hypothesize the following: It seems that especially in marginalized communities, that is: in communities that are structurally and systemically disadvantaged and that experience societal marginalization, this trust deficit and skepticism towards digitalization is prevalent. This could be so because, as a member of a marginalized community, one might quickly find issues resulting from marginalization to be present in digital spaces just like they are present in non-digital spaces. This paper will examine critically how attitudes in marginalized communities towards digital media are influenced by digital change. Do the risks of digitalization outweigh the advantages for marginalized communities? Are digital media perceived to provide advantages such as increased visibility and representation or are they perceived to fuel discrimination against marginalized people? Our research project brings together secondary analyses of existing studies with the results of our own qualitative interview study on marginalized people's perceptions of digital change. The paper will portray some example interviews, and thereby analyze if and how attitudes in the margins towards digital media change, what this change consists of, and how we can understand the changing attitudes within an ethical and educational framework. Our findings will point at a necessity to increase ethically based digital literacy (PEAT) in the German education system, starting in early education. Marginalized groups in particular must be empowered to become digitally competent through problem-oriented education. Independent self-efficacy can increase digital trust in fragmented societies. The paper concludes by introducing media ethics tools that are being developed as part of the project.
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