“You Can Connect with Like, the World!”: Social Platforms, Survival Support, and Digital Inequalities for People Experiencing Homelessness
Dublin Core
Title
“You Can Connect with Like, the World!”: Social Platforms, Survival Support, and Digital Inequalities for People Experiencing Homelessness
Subject
Digital Inequality, Social Network Sites, Social Media, Facebook, Crowdfunding, Social Capital, Homelessness
Description
This study examines how people experiencing homelessness invest their efforts in locating survival support over social media and crowdfunding and the barriers they experience along the way. Reporting on ethnographic fieldwork with unstably housed adults in Chicago, the study
introduces the concept of connective ambition to describe how platform narratives take hold in
a context of deep exclusion, informing a view of social media as a vast terrain of untapped support from strangers. Digital inequality emerges in the failure of campaigns to raise money for rent from virtual ties, but also in how limited skills and heightened concerns over privacy and safety discourage most people living on the street from ever seeking out support over social media. Ethnography can help better illustrate the interlocking features of offline and digital
inequalities, showing how status-specific uses of social platforms emerge and shape unequal
outcomes of digital participation for members of marginalized communities.
introduces the concept of connective ambition to describe how platform narratives take hold in
a context of deep exclusion, informing a view of social media as a vast terrain of untapped support from strangers. Digital inequality emerges in the failure of campaigns to raise money for rent from virtual ties, but also in how limited skills and heightened concerns over privacy and safety discourage most people living on the street from ever seeking out support over social media. Ethnography can help better illustrate the interlocking features of offline and digital
inequalities, showing how status-specific uses of social platforms emerge and shape unequal
outcomes of digital participation for members of marginalized communities.
Creator
Will Marler
Source
https://academic.oup.com/jcmc/article/27/1/zmab020/6423112
Publisher
xford University Press
Date
31 August 2021
Contributor
Sri Wahyuni
Format
PDF
Language
English
Type
Text
Coverage
Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication 00 (2021)
Files
Collection
Citation
Will Marler, ““You Can Connect with Like, the World!”: Social Platforms, Survival Support, and Digital Inequalities for People Experiencing Homelessness,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed May 21, 2025, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/8726.