Geographies of Digital Divide
A data-driven approach to understanding structural determinants of digital inequalities
New technologies beg important questions of sociology: How do different groups use the internet, and why do they differ in their internet use? How has the internet changed the way we relate to each other? How do existing theories account for the new phenomena of the internet age, like online dating, cyberbullying, or rampant misinformation?
Our research covers new ground, by tying together existing sociological theories and methodologies with a focus on the changes in society wrought by the internet and emerging ICTs.
A data-driven approach to understanding structural determinants of digital inequalities
This project examines the cultures of offensive speech online. It aims to learn about how offensive material is created, about the actors who produce and disseminate it, and the ways in which it is challenged.
This study will critically examine the value of graph databases for the social sciences through a focus on social class.
By Nanjala Nyabola
Artificial intelligence is touted as a solution to complex social and political issues around the world, particularly in developing countries like Kenya. This report argues that care is needed if AI is not to exacerbate cleavages in society instead.
By Colin Blackman, Ian Brown, Jonathan Cave, Simon Forge, Karmen Guevara, Lara Srivastava, Motohiro Tsuchiya, and Rafael Popper
How can we guide the evolution of the internet so that it best serves the needs of society? This report, written for the European Commission, tries to answer that question as it considers the sheer complexity of today’s internet.
3 November 2022
University of Oxford has joined a new £4 million research network, the Digital Good Network (DGN), to explore how to ensure that digital tech is a for good in society and the economy.
12 May 2022
The UK funding bodies have published the results of the UK’s most recent national research assessment exercise, the Research Excellence Framework (REF) 2021.
2 August 2021
An ‘infodemic’, the claim goes, threatens to undermine responses to the pandemic and, ultimately, vaccination efforts. But the term ‘infodemic’ itself is not backed up by science, and its use can potentially do more harm than good.
21 November 2019
Yahoo!, 09 August 2023
There is no evidence to suggest using Facebook is linked to widespread psychological harm, an Oxford Internet Institute (OII) study suggests.
The Independent, 23 February 2023
These not-so-distant household automations could benefit working-age women significantly, experts suggest
The Times, 23 February 2023
Chorebots will cut time wasted on housework ‘by 40% within a decade’