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Measuring Australia's digital divide: the Australian digital inclusion index 2018

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posted on 2024-07-12, 18:38 authored by Julian Thomas, Josephine Barraket, Chris Wilson, Kay CookKay Cook, Yee Man Louie, Indigo Holcombe-James, Scott Ewing, Trent MacDonald
With a growing range of education, information, government, and community services moving online, internet access is increasingly regarded as an essential service. The benefits of the digital economy cannot be shared equally when some members of the community are still facing real barriers to online participation. Digital inclusion is based on the premise that everyone should be able to make full use of digital technologies – to manage their health and wellbeing, access education and services, organise their finances, and connect with friends, family, and the world beyond. The Australian Digital Inclusion Index (ADII) was first published in 2016, providing the most comprehensive picture of Australia’s online participation to date. The ADII measures three vital dimensions of digital inclusion: Access, Affordability, and Digital Ability. It shows how these dimensions change over time, according to people’s social and economic circumstances, as well as across geographic locations. Scores are allocated to particular geographic regions and sociodemographic groups, over a five-year period from 2014 to 2018. Higher scores mean greater digital inclusion. This ADII report incorporates data collected up to March 2018.

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RMIT University

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Copyright © 2018 RMIT University 2018. The text in this report (except the back-cover text, and any logos) is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution – Non Commercial – Share Alike 4.0 International licence as it exists on 20 July 2017. See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0 All other rights reserved.

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eng

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