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Original Articles

Networked Individualism of Urban Residents: Discovering the communicative ecology in inner-city apartment buildings

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Pages 749-772 | Published online: 16 Oct 2007
 

Abstract

Certain patterns of interaction between people point to networks as an adequate conceptual model to characterize some aspects of social relationships mediated or facilitated by information and communication technology. Wellman proposes a shift from groups to networks and describes the ambivalent nature inherent in an egocentric yet still well-connected portfolio of sociability with the term ‘networked individualism’. In this paper, qualitative data from an action research study of social networks of residents in three inner-city apartment buildings in Australia are used to provide empirical grounding for the theoretical concept of networked individualism. However, this model focuses on network interaction rather than collective interaction. The authors propose ‘communicative ecology’ as a concept which integrates the three dimensions of ‘online and offline’, ‘global and local’ as well as ‘collective and networked’. They present their research on three layers of interpretation (technical, social and discursive) to deliver a rich description of the communicative ecology they found, that is, the way residents negotiate membership, trust, privacy, reciprocity, permeability and social roles in person-to-person mediated and direct relationships. They find that residents seamlessly traverse between online and offline communication; local communication and interaction maintains a more prominent position than global or geographically dispersed communication; and residents follow a dual approach which allows them to switch between collective and networked interaction depending on purpose and context.

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by ACID (the Australasian CRC for Interaction Design) established and supported under the Cooperative Research Centres Programme through the Australian Government's Department of Education, Science and Training. The authors would like to thank Jo Tacchi, Barbara Adkins, Damian Lewis, Bill Dutton, Gustavo Mesch, Ilan Talmud and the anonymous reviewers for valuable comments on earlier versions of this paper.

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