Looking to bridge the ‘digital divide’
Christine Carrillo
The whirl of technology has rapidly accelerated over the years,
scooping up a significant number of persons in its path and leaving
others seemingly more behind -- or at least, that’s the debate.
To discuss the issue of a possible digital divide, the School of
Humanities’ HumaniTech and the Humanities Center at UCI have joined
forces to sponsor a lecture series that begins today.
The man who has been widely credited for coining the term “digital
divide” will give the series’ primary lecture.
Larry Irving, a former presidential advisor who has worked at
developing policy in the telecommunications and information
technology industries on national and international levels for more
than two decades, will speak from 7 to 8:30 p.m. today in room 100 in
the Humanities Instructional building on campus.
“My goal is not to politicize the debate but to tell people the
truth ... and let them figure things out for themselves,” he said in
a telephone conversation.
The lecture, open to the public, will be more in the form of a
comfortable question-and-answer session moderated by John Smith,
director of the center, rather than a formal speech at a podium.
Audience members will also have an opportunity to ask Irving
questions pertinent to the digital issue.
“I’m really looking forward to having him here,” said Barbara
Cohen, dean of the School of Humanities’ HumaniTech. “He’s a very
dynamic speaker and he has the gift of gab.”
The goal of Irving, as well as the sponsors of the event, is to
educate the public about the surge of the digital age. As the use of
Internet and online services increases, Irving and those who have
witnessed “the digital divide” have found that certain communities --
namely minorities, women and rural Americans -- have not been swept
up with the age as they should have been.
“We pay a lot of lip service to this issue,” Irving said, adding
that the federal government neglected to address the issue when it
could’ve been most effective. “We had the wallet, but not the will;
now we have the will, but not the wallet.”
Irving will also discuss how the digital divide can be seen on a
local, national and global level.
“I think people will have a better understanding of what the
digital divide is,” Cohen said. “I think they’ll come out of it
realizing there’s more to it than they thought there was.”
While the idea of the lecture is to present the issues facing a
digital age, the sponsors of the event have a slightly more human
focus in mind.
“Each year, we choose a very specific aspect of what it means to
be human in a digital age,” she said. “Technology is so much a part
of our culture. ... What part does humanity play?”
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