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Digital Inequality in Cultural Institutions

Rethinking Digital Transformation Policy and Practice

Digital Inequality in Cultural Institutions cover

Digital Inequality in Cultural Institutions

Rethinking Digital Transformation Policy and Practice

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Pre-order. Available Jan 07 2027
$103.50 RRP $115.00 Website price saving $11.50 (10%)

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Description

What do cultural institutions need to do digital work- and what happens when those needs go unmet?
Contemporary cultural policy positions digital transformation as a democratic enterprise: a path toward greater access, inclusion, and participation. But this book shows that the reality is far more uneven. Drawing on nearly a decade of ethnographic research with more than 100 cultural institutions across Australia-including First Nations art centres, community archives, museums, and galleries-Holcombe-James demonstrates that the capacity to do digital work is not equally distributed. It falls along familiar lines of geography, institutional scale, and funding, reproducing and deepening existing inequalities across the sector.
Using the concept of digital capital, this book reveals how infrastructures, capabilities, and relationships combine to enable or constrain institutional digital transformation. Holcombe-James argues that addressing digital inequality requires moving beyond policy approaches that place the burden on individual institutions, toward collective and collaborative responses-shared infrastructures, distributed expertise, and sector-wide knowledge building. A vital resource for scholars and practitioners alike, this book reframes how we think about digital transformation in cultural policy, putting questions of equality and access at the centre.

Table of Contents

List of Tables
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. Tracing Digital Transformation Narratives in the Cultural Sector
2. Digital Capital in Cultural Institutions: A Framework for Understanding Institutional Digital Inequality
3. Researching Digital Inequality in the Cultural Sector
4. Infrastructures: The Material Dimension
5. Capabilities: The User Dimension
6. Relationships: The Social Dimension
7. Unevenly Distributed Digital Capital
8. Rethinking Our Approach to Digital Transformation in the Cultural Sector
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index

Product details

Bloomsbury Academic Test
Published Jan 07 2027
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Pages 224
ISBN 9781350416338
Imprint Bloomsbury Academic
Dimensions 9 x 6 inches
Series Bloomsbury Studies in Digital Cultures
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Indigo Holcombe-James

Indigo Holcombe-James is a Research Fellow in the…

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