Older People in a Digitalized Society

From Marginality to Agency

Päivi Rasi-Heikkinen
Emerald
Emerald

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Hardback
9781803821689
14 October 2022
£68.99
eBook (PDF)
9781803821672
14 October 2022
£68.99
eBook (ePub)
9781803821696
14 October 2022
£68.99

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  • Description
  • Contents
  • About

The digitalization of society is constructed as a necessary leap that governments and citizens need to take. However, with many older people lacking adequate digital competences to support their full participation in today’s digitalized society, how is the marginalisation of older people in digital society socially constructed? How can we promote older people’s digital inclusion and agency?

Presenting case studies from Finland, one of the top performers in the supply and demand of digital public services, Older People in a Digitalized Society outlines internationally relevant implications for promoting the social construction of older people’s agency. Delving into their digital competences, and use and non-use of Internet and eHealth technologies, Rasi-Heikkinen showcases the potential exclusionary effects of digitalization, and highlights the implications for digital inclusion practice and policy. Contesting the dominant discourses which suggest digital technologies and media play central roles in the learning, well-being, everyday life, and participation in society for individuals throughout their lifespan, Older People in a Digitalized Society addresses the digital gap faced by older generations that do not welcome digitalization, or even see it as a positive marginality: a choice that they have consciously made.

Paying attention to how digitalization is a contested issue constructed with various, ambivalent, and paradoxical representations, Rasi-Heikkinen shines an important light on how older people are constructed as being on the margins of digitalization by researchers and the media.

Introduction

  • PART I: Defining the Key Concepts
  • Chapter 1. Social Construction of Marginality and Agency
  • Chapter 2. Digitalization and Digital Divides
  • Chapter 3. Older People, Internet Use, and Nonuse
  • Chapter 4. Older People’s Digital Competences
  • PART II: Case Studies of Older People in Digital Society
  • Chapter 5. Internet Nonusers’ Positive Self-Marginalization and Agency (Study 1)
  • Chapter 6. Diversity and Agency in Rural Villages (Study 2)
  • Chapter 7. Negative Marginalization and Limited Agency by Newspapers (Study 3)
  • Chapter 8. Agency and Social Support Networks in a Robotic eHealth Service (Study 4)
  • Chapter 9. Ethical Considerations
  • PART III: Conclusion
  • Chapter 10. Key Findings
  • Chapter 11. Suggestions for Future Studies
  • Chapter 12. Practical Implications

Päivi Rasi-Heikkinen is Professor at the Faculty of Education’s Media Education Hub at the University of Lapland, Finland. Holding a PhD in Education and SScD in Social Psychology, Rasi-Heikkinen has 20 years of experience in working in and leading research and development projects in the field of media education.