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Digital access,choice and agency in remote Sarawak
Authors:Christine Horn  Ellie Rennie
Affiliation:1. Centre for Urban Transitions, Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, Unit 10, 109 Flinders Street, Thornbury, 3071 VIC, Australia;2. Digital Ethnography Research Centre, RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia
Abstract:Internet use and access to digital devices continues to increase even in remote regions around the world, but users do not participate equally or engage in the same practices online. This leads to inequalities in the outcomes different groups of users can generate as a result of their online practices. Drawing from recent literature on digital divides and using a theoretical framework focused on user choice and agency, we present data from a study of internet and device use in remote villages in Sarawak, a state of Malaysia on the island of Borneo. These villages lack most basic infrastructure such as paved roads or grid electricity, but some have mobile phone and mobile internet access installed under Malaysia’s Universal Service Provision. We discuss qualitative and quantitative data collected between 2015 and 2017 to point to the opportunities as well as obstacles users in remote communities encounter in their engagements with digital devices and the internet. We argue that while remote areas seem to lag behind urban areas in terms of users’ internet skills and practices, people choose to engage with these technologies in ways that are appropriate to their needs and to the local low-bandwidth environment. To enable these communities to tap into additional potential benefits of internet use, however, faster and more reliable access is a prerequisite.
Keywords:Digital divide  Digital inequalities  Digital repertoires  Remote internet use  Southeast Asia  Digital media
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