英国庇护制度中的互联网接入、场所和归属感

Edanur Yazici
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引用次数: 0

摘要

众所周知,数字技术是日常生活的一部分。然而,英国内政部并不认为通信或交通是寻求庇护者的 "基本需求"。一个 Gigabyte 的移动数据可以花费每周庇护支持费用的 10%,而一张公交车票的花费又是 10%。通过询问谁可以移动和连接,本文探讨了寻求庇护者中数字空间和物理空间之间的关系。通过一项人种学研究,本文认为,访问互联网可以促进人们在物理和数字空间中的归属感。然而,这种归属感受到 "现实世界 "的权力关系、网络设计的消费导向以及庇护制度的物理排斥的制约。文章的结论是,COVID-19 使数字排斥、数字排斥与物理排斥的交叉以及种族、阶级和法律地位变得更加明显。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Internet access, place and belonging in the British asylum system
It is widely acknowledged that digital technologies are a part of everyday life. However, the UK Home Office does not consider communication or transport to be ‘essential needs’ for people seeking asylum. One Gigabyte of mobile data can cost up to 10% of weekly asylum support payments and a single bus ticket another 10%. By asking who can move and connect, this article explores the relationship between digital and physical spaces among people seeking asylum. Drawing on an ethnographic study, it argues that access to the Internet can facilitate a sense of belonging in physical and digital space. This, however, is constrained by “real-world” power relations, the consumer orientation of web design and the physical exclusions of the asylum system. The article concludes that digital exclusion, its intersections with physical exclusions as well as race, class and legal status have been brought into even sharper relief by COVID-19.
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