The Center for Education and Research in Information Assurance and Security (CERIAS)

The Center for Education and Research in
Information Assurance and Security (CERIAS)

The Internet in the Communication Infrastructure of Urban Residential Communities: Macro- or Mesolinkage?

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Author

Sorin Matei, Sandra Ball-Rokeach

Entry type

article

Abstract

The article refines the view that the Internet is increasingly incorporated in everyday life, concluding that the new medium has been partially integrated in the "communication infrastructure" of English-speaking Los Angeles neighborhoods. Here, Internet connectedness is associated with civic participation and indirectly contributes to "belonging" to a residential community. However, in predominantly Asian and Latino areas, the Internet is disengaged from communication environments that lead to belonging, being associated with mainstream media. In these communities its contribution is contradictory; although it probably contributes to the process of ethnic assimilation, it might also lead to disengagement of most educated and technologically savvy residents from their neighborhoods. A possible "magnifying glass effect" is proposed as explanation for the differential integration of new media in community life.

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Date

2003 – 12

Journal

Journal of Communication

Key alpha

Matei

Pages

642-657

Volume

53

Affiliation

Purdue University

Publication Date

2003-12-01

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