
The Ever-Shifting Internet Population: A new look at Internet access and the digital divide
4/16/2003 |
Report | Amanda Lenhart John Horrigan Lee Rainie Katherine Allen Angie Boyce Mary Madden Erin O'Grady
A March-May 2002 survey of the Pew Internet Project revealed a new fluidity in Internet use—detailing the habits of intermittent Internet users, Net Dropouts and Net Evaders, or those who live with Internet users but do not go online themselves. The survey also asks questions of all non-users, focusing on the barriers to and reasons behind their offline status. The research reveals that cost, physical access (particularly for persons with disabilities) and fear and embarrassment over skills or use of the technology still prove to be formidable barriers among some sub groups. Lack of desire also kept many non-users, particularly those with demographic characteristics more suggestive of Internet users, offline. Demographically, the shape of the non-user population has not changed dramatically over the past 2 to 3 years. While all groups have increased in the portion of their populations online, the overall inequalities between groups that sparked initial concern over the “digital divide” remain today.
View PDF of Report
View PDF of Questionnaire
Other Demographics Resources
Memo | A Portrait of Early Adopters
Memo | China's Online Population Explosion
Report | Latinos Online
Memo | Are "Wired Seniors" Sitting Ducks?
Memo | Generations Online
Related Topic Areas
Report Press Release
Presentation:
Demographics, Degrees of Internet Access, and Health
Trends in Internet Adoption and Use
The Ever-Shifting Internet Population
Article
Revisualizing the Digital Divide as a Spectrum
Report Coverage:
File:
Who's Not Online Report
Data Set:
March-May 2002 Data Set
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