Towards Digital Social Infrastructure? Digital Neighborly Connectedness as a Social Resource

Yann Rees, Sebastian Kurtenbach, Katrin Rosenberger und Armin Küchler  | 2022

Social infrastructure is made up of various material as well as non-material goods, ranging from venues for leisure such as movie theaters to indispensable everyday commodities, like sidewalks and streets. This is true both for urban and rural areas. However, the increasing emergence of digital aspects of social infrastructure has seemed to go unnoticed to some extent, with research specifically focusing on these digital aspects of social infrastructure being scarce at best—even though digitalization is currently a major emerging meta-development worldwide. The goal of our contribution is therefore to investigate the digital sphere and integrate it into the concept of social infrastructure. Drawing on descriptive findings from a multi-sited, community-based survey of residents in four rural areas in Germany (N = 413) as well as from 40 qualitative interviews, we present an integrative and expanded conceptualization of what we term a tangible digital social infrastructure. To do so, we examine digital neighborly connectedness as a social resource during the Covid-19 pandemic as a case study. We argue that digital neighborly connectedness served as both an integral part of on-site social infrastructure and as a social resource, especially during pandemic times. We discuss our results in light of current research on social infrastructure, with a specific focus on the scope of what counts as social infrastructure, as well as current discourse on social infrastructure in rural areas.

Date
10.11.2022
Language
English
Publication Type
Journal article
Discipline
Audience
Open Access

Contributing RISC authors

Work Packages

BIE_F_04
RISC Bielefeld
Zusammenhalt in und durch Nachbarschaften – Stadtteilstudien und Regionalpanel NRW und Niedersachsen
» Project description
» back to publication overview