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Does Place Really Matter? Broadband Availability, Race, and Income sfdsdf

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Title: 
Does Place Really Matter? Broadband Availability, Race, and Income
Authors: 
Ying Li, Ph.D.
Nicol Turner-Lee, Ph.D.
Samir Gambhir
Mikyung Baek, Ph.D.
Publication Date: 
April 4, 2011
Research Type: 
Publications
Body: 

This paper presents three case studies in the state of South Carolina, and the cities of Chicago, IL, and Los Angeles, CA, with in-depth analyses of wireline and wireless access in high minority, low-income communities. The findings of the study concluded that broadband service is becoming much more ubiquitous in high minority, low-income communities, yet levels of adoption still remain relatively low. The study also concluded that race is not a significant explanatory variable for disparate broadband deployment, and despite the availability of mobile broadband in low-income, high minority areas, wireless coverage is still inconsistent within regions.

 

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Institutes: 
Media & Technology
Topics: 
Broadband
Internet
Digital Divide
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Content Type: 
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