Social Implications of the Internet
Working Paper #17, Summer 2001
Paul DiMaggio, Eszter Hargittai, W. Russell Neuman, and John
P. Robinson
ABSTRACT
The Internet is a critically important research site for sociologists
testing theories of technology diffusion and media effects, particularly
because it is a medium uniquely capable of integrating modes of
communication and forms of content. Current research tends to
focus on the Internet's implications in five domains: 1) inequality
(the "digital divide"); 2) community and social capital;
3) political participation; 4) organizations and other economic
institutions; and 5) cultural participation and cultural diversity.
A recurrent theme across domains is that the Internet tends to
complement rather than displace existing media and patterns of
behavior. Thus in each domain, utopian claims and dystopic warnings
based on extrapolations from technical possibilities have given
way to more nuanced and circumscribed understandings of how Internet
use adapts to existing patterns, permits certain innovations,
and reinforces particular kinds of change. Moreover, in each domain
the ultimate social implications of this new technology depend
on economic, legal and policy decisions that are shaping the Internet
as it becomes institutionalized. Sociologists need to study the
Internet more actively and, particularly, to synthesize research
findings on individual user behavior with macroscopic analyses
of institutional and political-economic factors that constrain
that behavior.
This paper can be found in the Annual. Review of Sociology
2001. Volume 27, pages 307-336.
Full
text version in PDF format. |