Title: at Home, the Community
1 at Home, the Community WorkBarry
WellmanNetLab Director, University of
Torontowww.chass.utoronto.ca/wellmanllman_at_chass
.utoronto.ca
Toward Networked Individualism The Internet in
Everyday Life
2NetLab Goals
- Descend from seeing the Internet
- As Transcendentally Unique
- Towards Immanently Embedded in Everyday Life
- Use Real World Social Data
- Survey, Network analysis, Ethnography
- Evaluate indicators of the turn towardsNetworked
Individualism - Bias towards working collaboratively
- Interdisciplinary (Comp sci, Info sci, Comm sci,
etc - International comparisons the Non-Universal net
- Build (and Evaluate) stuff, as well as Studying
stuff
3This Conference is about The Turn to Networked
Societies
- Computer Networks, Economic Networks
Communication NetworksAre All Social Networks - Been Doing Social Network Analysisfor 35 Years
- Founded Intl Net for Net Analysis 1977
- Glad to Have You Aboard!
- Conference in Cancun Next Month
4Outline of Talk
- A Conference Theme
- What is the Transformed Nature of Work and
Community in a Networked Society? - Transformation Began Before the Internet
- From Group-Based to Networked Societies
- Door-to-Door, Place-to-Place, Person-to-Person
- Transforming Enterprise Networked Individualism
- The Six Socials Linkages, Capital, Cohesion,
Mobilization, Control, Exclusion
5Door-to Door Groups
Place-to-Place Glocalization
Person-to-PersonNetworked Individualism
6Social TransformationFrom Groups to Networks
- Changing Connectivity
- Sparsely-Knit
- Loosely-Bounded
- Multiple Foci
7Already Transformed Communities Pre-Internet
- The households community, not the individuals
- Community dispersed regionally,
(inter)nationally - More friends, neighbours, acquaintances,
workmates than kin - Sparsely-knit few directly connected with each
other - Specialized support
- Domestication Encounters in Private Space
- Homes, Phones
- Wives organize/serve couples get-togethers
ties with in-laws
8Second Age of Internet Studies From
Transcendence to Imminence
- Documenting Situating
- For Government, Academe, Commerce, Public
Interest - Ethnographies
- Surveys Access, Users and Uses
- Realizations that Reliable Research Data Needed
- Grounding Internet Use in Overall Experiences
- Integrating Net Use with Other Media Use
- Differentiating Types of User Populations
-
9Second Age of Internet Studies From
Transcendence to Imminence
- Is the Internet
- Disconnecting Household Members?
- Transforming, Diminishing, Adding To
Communication Community? - Civic Involvement Voluntary Orgs, Politics?
- Alienation Loss of Control, Sense of Control?
- Replacing Everyday Pursuits?
- Affecting Structure of Work?
10Changing Users and Uses
- Within-Country Digital Divides Decreasing
- Newbies Look Like Rest of Population
- SES, Language Remain Important
- Gender, Age, Life-Cycle Gaps Closing
- North Americans Resemble General Pop.
- Other OECD Non-OECD Countries More
- Male, Better Educated, Younger, Single
- Does Ontogeny Recapitulate Phylogeny?
- New Catalan Japanese Research
11From Newbies to Users
- People Rapidly Become Experienced
- Users Become Frequent Users
- The Real Digital Divide is Know-How
- Not Access
- AMD Global Consumer Advisory Board Computer
SATs Coming
12National Geographic Survey 2000 and Survey 2001
- Survey 2000 -- Fall 1998 Cleaned Sample
- 15,659 North Americans (US, Canada) 77
- 3,079 Other OECD (Germany, Japan, etc.) 15
- 1,604 Non-OECD (Often Less Developed) 8
- Survey 2001 Entering Data Analysis Stage
- Collaborators Jeffrey Boase, Wenhong Chen, Keith
Hampton, Catherine Mobley, Anabel Quan-Haase,
James Witte
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18Email Adds on To F2F, Phone
- Nearby Interactions Continue to Predominate
- 63 of All Contact with Kin are with Nearby Kin
- 42 of all Email Contact with Kin are with Nearby
Kin - Multiple Media Used
- For Daily Emailers
- For Nearby Kin, Email is 22 of All Contact
- For Faraway Kin, Email is 53 of All Contact
- Friendship Data is Similar, but More Contact
- And More Email Contact
19 Neighboring in Netville
- Keith Hampton Barry Wellman
- City and Community, 2003
- Highly Fast Asynchronous Transfer Mode
- 16 MegaBit/Second
- Always On
- Telco Field Trial in Toronto Suburb
20View of Netville
21Wired and Non-Wired Neighboring in Netville
22Catalonian Web Surfers
- Few Use Email Frequently
- Most Use Web Services Frequently
- Why?
- Localistic Society
- Most Friends and Kin Live Nearby
- Most Live with Parents
- High Touch Society Smell, See, Feel, Hear
- Whys are Conjectures Now
23Japanese Mobilers
- Phone Based Web Services
- Small Screens
- Phone Based Texting /Short Messages
- Frequent short contacts
- rather than long statements
- Young Use Mobiles Mid/Old Use PCs
- Cohort or Age-Grade Effect?
- Richness vs Portability
- Incompatible Systems Hinder Social Cohesion
24The Double Internet Paradox
- (1a) First Age Hype Asserted that Internet
Would Transform Society - (1b) As, the Internet Became Embedded in
Everyday Life - (2a) Second Age Documenting the Embedding of
the Internet in Everyday Life - (2b) As Societies Quietly Transforming From
Groups to Networks
25Turn Towards Networked Individualism
- Transportation Communication Have Become
Individualized - Dual Careers Multiple Schedules
- Multiple Employers
- Sequential and Contemporaneous
- Physical Separation of Work, Home, Commerce
- Movement of Work away from Workplace
- Teleworker, Flex Worker, Road Warrior
- Computerization Allows Personalization
- No Over-Arching Social Controllers
26Place To Place (GloCalization)
- (Phones, Networked PCs, Airplanes, Expressways,
RR, Transit) - Home, Office Important Contexts,
- Not Intervening Space
- Specialized Relationships Not MultiStranded
Ties - Ramified Sparsely Knit Not Local Solidarities
- Not neighborhood-based
- Not densely-knit with a group feeling
- Partial Membership in Multiple Workgroups/
Communities - Often Based on Shared Interest
- Connectivity Beyond Neighborhood, Work Site
- GloCalization Globally Connected, Locally
Invested - Household to Household /
- Work Group to Work Group
- Domestication, Feminization of Community
- Knowledge Comes From Internal External Sources
27Technological Changes Foster Social Affordances
forNew Forms of Community
- Bandwidth Information? Knowledge?
- Anytime 24 / 7 / 365
- Anywhere Ubiquity
- Globalized Connectivity
- Wireless Portability
- Convergence Any Medium Accesses All
- Personalization
28Person-to-Person Networked Individualism
- (Mobile Phones, Wireless Computing, Lonely Car)
- Individualized Networking
- Little Awareness of Context
- Private Desires Replace Public Civility
- Multiple Specialized Relationships
- Partial Membership in Multiple Networks
- Long-Distance Relationships
- More Transitory Relationships
- Online Interactions Linked with Offline
- More Uncertainty, More Maneuverability
- Less Palpable than Traditional Solidarities
Alienation? - Sparsely-Knit Fewer Direct Connections Than
Door-To-Door - Possibly Less Caring for Strangers
- More Weak Ties
- Need for Institutional Memory Knowledge
Management
29The Six Socials
- Linkages Networks, Not Groups
- Capital Networking, not Org. Membership (Putnam)
- Cohesion No Single Commitment Crosscutting Ties
- Mobilization Interpersonal, Ad Hoc
- Control Maneuverability among Multiple Nets
- Exclusion Informed Use, not Access, to Internet
30 Groups ? Networks
- Each in its Place ? Mobility of People and
Goods - United Family ? Serial Marriage, Mixed Custody
- Shared Community ? Multiple Partial Personal
Nets - Neighborhoods ? Dispersed Communities
- Surveillance ? Privacy
- Control ? Autonomy
- Voluntary Organizations ? Informal Leisure
- Face-to-Face ? Computer-Mediated
Communication - Public Spaces ? Private Spaces
- Visibility ? Anonymity
- Focused Work Unit ? Networked Organization
- Job in a Company ? Career in a Profession
- Autarky ? Outsourcing
- Office, Factory ? Airplane, Internet,
Cellphone - Ascription ? Achievement
- Hierarchies ? Multiple Reporting
Relationships - Conglomerates ? Virtual Organizations/Alliance
s - Collective Security ? Civil Liberties
- Cold War Blocs ? Fluid, Transitory Alliances
31Barry Wellman Caroline Haythornthwaite
editorsBlackwell Publishers, 2002Papers
atwww.chass.utoronto.ca/wellman
_at_chass.utoronto.ca
The Internet in Everyday Life