RODRIGUES, N. N.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/4034747917315609; RODRIGUES, Nadja da Nóbrega.
Resumo:
This thesis aims to investigate the relations between paradigms, discourses, actions and
the brazilian public policy of Digital Inclusion (DI), especially the use of the Internet, in
what concerns the promotion of citizenship and social inclusion in the physical and
virtual world. We conducted a case study in João Pessoa – PB. Based on key concepts,
we observed how the DI public actions promoted by the governments and the Federal
Institute of Paraíba (IFPB) brought citizens closer to Information and Communication
Technologies (ICT), and the contributions of these actions to the benefits idealized by
cyberculture, regarding to citizenship and inclusion. The results suggest that
contemporary societies conform as networks supported by ICT in social, economic,
political and cultural aspects; although the actions and policies bring elements of
inclusion in their discourses, as if this process had been moved in the universal sense,
globalization presents itself as a selective process of agents in the networks; research in
government portals suggests efforts in actions that corroborate with the discourses,
including in connection with the multidimensionality of human life, but there are
contradictions caused by discrepancies and inequalities in DI processes, and therefore
the result is the increase or the maintenance of exclusion; it is important to rethink the
cycle of public policies, with participatory and democratic decisions, involving
governments, companies, institutions and citizens; the experiences in teaching, research
and extension in IFPB, relating ICT and DI, have at times connected themselves to
government policies, and have suggested that infrastructure problems in some places do
not even guarantee access to these technologies, and that actions that develop the
technique without connection with citizenship, reduce the reach of these technologies in
human terms, restricting their social results; effective digital education for inclusion
requires sense for ICTs, respect for contexts, qualification in citizenship, horizontal
relations with communities, and their protagonism in the cycles of institutional actions
and government policies.