无障碍作为公平的数字公民参与基础设施的基础

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引用次数: 0

摘要

高等教育和公民参与领域的个人和组织越来越意识到他们有义务培养学生的归属感,并在工作中支持历史上代表性不足的群体。作为这一努力的一部分,作者认为公民参与基础设施(CEI)——他们用这个术语来描述旨在改善高等教育中公民参与的所有组织和相关资源,这些组织和资源来自校园内外的参与者——必须更多地关注数字可访问性。作者通过建立高等教育机构在公民参与项目中对校外组织和资源的依赖程度,以及校园为学生提供可访问的数字内容的法律和道德义务,来记录这一需求。为了评估CEI内数字可访问性的现状,作者对11个组织的网站进行了可访问性审计,这些组织以各种方式为大学校园的选民动员工作做出了贡献。调查结果显示,这些网站的内容和页面模板中存在可访问性障碍。作者最后讨论了内容创建者、内容共享者和决策者在满足可访问性标准方面的责任,以及校园内外的参与者如何适应这些角色。它们还就如何推进这项工作提供指导。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Accessibility as a Foundation for an Equitable Digital Civic Engagement Infrastructure
Individuals and organizations in both higher education and civic engagement have become increasingly aware of their obligation to foster a sense of belonging among students and to support historically underrepresented populations within their work. As part of this effort, the authors argue that the civic engagement infrastructure (CEI)—a term they use to capture the full range of organizations and associated resources directed toward improving civic engagement within higher education which stems from actors both on and off campus—must pay more attention to digital accessibility. The authors document this need by establishing the degree to which higher education institutions rely on off-campus organizations and resources in civic engagement programming, as well as campus’s legal and ethical obligations to provide accessible digital content to students. To assess the current status of digital accessibility within the CEI, the authors performed accessibility audits on the websites of 11 organizations that contribute in various ways to voter mobilization efforts on college campuses. The findings revealed accessibility barriers embedded in the content and in the page templates used for these sites. The authors close with a discussion of the responsibility that content creators, content sharers, and decision makers have in meeting accessibility standards and how on- and off-campus actors fit into these roles. They also offer guidance on how to move forward with this work.
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