Telework and the "Disability Divide"

Title: Telework and the "Disability Divide"
Format: Chapter
Publication Date: December 2009
Published In: Handbook of Research on Overcoming Digital Divides: Constructing an Equitable and Competitive Information Society
Publisher IGI Global
Description:

Much of the discourse on the digital divide focuses on issues of information disparity and accessibility, frequently in socioeconomic terms. This perspective overlooks an important aspect of the digital divide, the lack of access and missed opportunities faced by persons with disabilities, referred to here as the "disability divide." Barriers to access and knowledgeable use of information and communication technology (ICT) represent more than simple exclusion from information to encompass social segregation and devaluation. At its most insidious, barriers to ICTs limit full community engagement in employment activities. This chapter examines the ramification of the impact of digital divide on the nature of employment and participation in the workplace, using ICT to conduct telework, and explores challenges to social policy with respect to 'reasonable' accommodations. In the absence of practices, structures, and policies targeting the distributive work environment, telework is much less likely to close the digital divide for persons with a disability. This suggests the need to explore and develop potential policy options to close the disability divide. © 2010, IGI Global.

Ivan Allen College Contributors:
External Contributors: Bricout, J.C., Ward, A.C.
Citation:

Bricout, J.C., Baker, P.M.A., Ward, A.C., & Moon, N.W. (2009). Telework and the Disability Divide. In E. Ferro, Y.K. Dwivedi, J.r. Gil-Garcia, & M.D. Williams (Eds.), Handbook of Research on Overcoming Digital Divides: Constructing an Equitable and Competitive Information Society. Hershey, PA: IGI Global.

Related Departments:
  • Center for Advanced Communications Policy