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Children and online risk: Powerless victims or resourceful participants?

Staksrud, Elisabeth; Livingstone, Sonia
Journal article; AcceptedVersion; Peer reviewed
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Children_and_on ... aksrud+and+Livingstone.pdf (16.12Mb)
Year
2009
Permanent link
http://urn.nb.no/URN:NBN:no-58142

CRIStin
353617

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  • Institutt for medier og kommunikasjon [244]
  • CRIStin høstingsarkiv [16915]
Original version
Information, Communication and Society. 2009, 12 (3), 364-387, DOI: 10.1080/13691180802635455
Abstract
Research on the risks associated with children’s use of the internet often aim to inform policies of risk prevention. Yet paralleling the effort to map the nature extent of online risk is a growing unease that the goal of risk prevention tends support an over-protective, risk-averse culture that restricts the freedom of online exploration that society encourages for children in other spheres. It is central to adolescence that teenagers learn to anticipate and cope with risk - in short, to resilient. In this article, we inquire into children and teenagers’ responses after have experienced online content or contact risks. Pan-European findings show especially in Northern European countries with high internet access, parental perceptions of likelihood of online risk to their child is negatively associated with their perceived ability to cope. A comparison of representative surveys conducted among children in three relatively ‘high risk’ countries (Norway, Ireland and the United Kingdom) found that although the frequency of exposure to perceived risks, especially content risks, is fairly high, most children adopt positive (e.g. help from friends) or, more commonly, neutral (e.g. ignoring the experience) strategies to cope, although a minority exacerbate the risks (e.g. passing risky on to friends). Most strategies tend to exclude adult involvement. Significant differences in both risk and coping are found by gender and age across these countries, pointing to different styles of youthful risk management.

This research was first published in Information, Communication & Society. © Taylor & Francis
 
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