Access to the Internet and Declining Democracy in Venezuela

IF 1 Q3 COMMUNICATION Journal of Information Policy Pub Date : 2023-12-12 DOI:10.5325/jinfopoli.13.2023.0009
Carlos Solar
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Abstract

This article explores the effects of different social determinants on having Internet access in Venezuela amid recent economic and political turmoil affecting living conditions and satisfaction with democracy. It argues that the so-called digital divide, a term depicting connectivity gaps, uses a simplistic dichotomy measuring percentages of who has and who hasn’t accessed the Internet. The article goes beyond such a restrictive metric and grasps whether, and to what extent, having Internet at home is affected by more revealing sociodemographic predictors, including gender, age, place of residency, income, or education. To illustrate my point, the article draws on data from the 2017 AmericasBarometer public opinion survey conducted in Venezuela. It models logistic regression to explore the straightforward but often understudied characteristics that might carry voting-age adults to have Internet service. Given Venezuela’s democracy crisis, the article also questions whether having Internet at home affected respondents being satisfied with how democracy worked in the country.
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委内瑞拉的互联网接入与民主衰落
在委内瑞拉,最近的经济和政治动荡影响了人们的生活条件和对民主的满意度,本文探讨了不同的社会决定因素对上网的影响。文章认为,所谓的数字鸿沟是一个描述连接性差距的术语,它使用了一个简单的二分法来衡量谁使用了互联网,谁没有使用互联网。这篇文章超越了这种限制性的衡量标准,而是要了解在家中上网是否会受到性别、年龄、居住地、收入或教育程度等更具启发性的社会人口学预测因素的影响,以及影响的程度。为了说明我的观点,文章引用了2017年在委内瑞拉进行的 "美洲晴雨表"(AmericasBarometer)民意调查的数据。文章建立了逻辑回归模型,以探讨可能使投票年龄段的成年人拥有互联网服务的直接但往往未被充分研究的特征。考虑到委内瑞拉的民主危机,文章还提出了一个问题:家中拥有互联网是否会影响受访者对该国民主运作的满意度。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
7
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊最新文献
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