Belonging and being excludedBelonging or not belongingWhat does belonging imply? Being accepted by a group? Feeling you have an enhanced identity? Having a sensation of power? Complying to certain tacit or explicit rules? Having both privileges and constraints?... Does the fact of belonging to a group necessarily lead to exclusion? Clearly not. There are so many groups and categories that each of us do not belong to without us feeling excluded. Rather exclusion springs from the desire to belong while not being able to. Such a description seems to place the onus for exclusion on the individual or group of individuals whereas both belonging and being excluded are not just the attributes of an individual but are above all on-going relationships in which technology may or may not play a role.Clearly the attitude or behaviour of those in groups and of those outside them are at the heart of exclusion. Is it in the nature of certain types of groups that they naturally seek to grow and when they can no longer grow, to defend their identity? Such was Elias Canetti's hypothesis in his book "Crowds and Power"... and, as a consequence, do (dominant and would-be dominant) groups necessarily set out to create a strong desire to belong to them even if the conditions are such that most people cannot? Tools of exclusion?Does the use of tools necessarily lead to the exclusion of those not using them? How many people feel excluded because they don't have a printing press or a video recorder? Is it not rather the fact of making tools appear necessary to everybody for would-be essential activities that creates the feeling of exclusion on the part of those who are unable to use them, especially when those tools can't completely fulfil their promise? Is this not exactly what advertising sets out to do: make a product seem absolutely essential even if you don't need it or can't have it? The information society - our saviour? Do not the market forces (and to a lesser extent the political forces) behind the adoption of information and communication technologies push for widespread if not all-embracing use of these tools? Commercially speaking the aim is clearly to have a maximum number of customers. As for government administrations, hoped for savings in using such technologies will be lost if traditional means have to be maintained in parallel with new electronic tools. But is the search for "all-embracing, universal solutions" that are good for everyone feasible or even desirable? Dare we ask the question?Universal accessIs not the talk of universal access to the so-called "Information Society" tools an indication that the use of such tools is seen by its advocates as necessarily involving everybody? Does not talking about the need for universal access, imply that:
At the same time, is not the attention given to universal access symptomatic of a belief that possessing the tools is in itself sufficient? "Just plug-in and away you go!" says the slogan. Strangely enough for a proclaimed knowledge society, emphasis continues to be placed on the possession of commodities rather than the development and use of knowledge. Access to the Global Information Infrastructure without the knowledge to use that access is meaningless? Access to the Global Information Infrastructure and (occasionally) the related knowledge are seen as a source of empowerment for those excluded from power. Is this hope justified? When portable video came onto the market in the '60s, militant organisations were full of hope. Here was a tool that would democratise mass media. Events turned out quite different. For one, they had overlooked the problem of language. Although the Net is not really comparable, there has been a similar belief in the empowerment of tools forgetting that most disempowerment springs from social systems and the lack of human, rather than technological, skills. Some possible paths to follow ...
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