Inequity in the Technopolis

Race, Class, Gender, and the Digital Divide in Austin

Joseph Straubhaar editor Jeremiah Spence editor Zeynep Tufekci editor Roberta G Lentz editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:University of Texas Press

Published:1st Mar '12

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Inequity in the Technopolis cover

Over the past few decades, Austin, Texas, has made a concerted effort to develop into a "technopolis," becoming home to companies such as Dell and numerous start-ups in the 1990s. It has been a model for other cities across the nation that wish to become high-tech centers while still retaining the livability to attract residents. Nevertheless, this expansion and boom left poorer residents behind, many of them African American or Latino, despite local and federal efforts to increase lower-income and minority access to technology.

This book was born of a ten-year longitudinal study of the digital divide in Austin—a study that gradually evolved into a broader inquiry into Austin's history as a segregated city, its turn toward becoming a technopolis, what the city and various groups did to address the digital divide, and how the most disadvantaged groups and individuals were affected by those programs.

The editors examine the impact of national and statewide digital inclusion programs created in the 1990s, as well as what happened when those programs were gradually cut back by conservative administrations after 2000. They also examine how the city of Austin persisted in its own efforts for digital inclusion by working with its public libraries and a number of local nonprofits, and the positive impact those programs had.

Inequity in the Technopolis is a neat exploration of economic and cultural forces at play during about a twenty-five year period in metropolitan Austin related to the technology boom of the late twentieth-century. (Texas Books in Review)

ISBN: 9780292754386

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 454g

296 pages