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1. Introduction 2. Searching for the Core of the Information Society Theory: Developments, Versions, Arguments 3. Manuel Castells: Towards the Digital Divide of the Information Age 4. Digital Divide Research 5. Tenuous Assumptions in Digital Divide Research 6. Understanding Indispensability: Contexts, Networks and Discourses 7. Conclusion: Towards a New Theory of Information Society
The author offers a new approach that views the internet as one of many possible information and communication channels and assesses the digital divide as defined by a contextually determined necessity to use the internet as the only possible tool, showing that the digital divide is not a permanent or pervasive condition of every aspect of life or society, but that internet use depends on context, and that the idea that inadequate internet access always leads to social disadvantage is misleading. He addresses the key arguments of the information society theory, to illustrate technology’s key role; the origins and construction of a Manuel Castells' social theory and its relationship to the information society and the digital divide thesis, showing how the dominant approach in digital divide research is connected to the information society theory; digital divide research, its core argument, and its thesis and its validity; the inadequacies of the digital divide thesis and assumptions in digital divide research, including universal impact, universal necessity of internet use, isolated users, and the belief that innovation should be adopted by everyone; a contextual approach to the digital divide that explains how context determines the social impact of the digital divide; and the role of the information society theory in the process of informatization.