Hansi Lo Wang, NPR; Native Americans On Tribal Land Are 'The Least Connected' To High-Speed Internet
""The least connected"
The findings are no surprise to Traci Morris. She leads the American Indian Policy Institute at Arizona State University, which is preparing to release a report on a new study of broadband internet service on tribal lands.
"We're
the least connected. We're under-connected. We're under-served," says
Morris, a member of the Chickasaw Nation of Oklahoma.
Mobile
phones often are the main tools to help residents on American Indian
land to get online, but many communities do not have reliable cell
coverage nearby. On some reservations, Morris adds, residents rely on
internet service at the local library, tribal office or school.
"Folks
find a way to access it. Folks are resilient," she says. "But it
shouldn't be this way in the U.S. We should have the same access as
other folks, and if we don't, it's going to put us down a path of
further have's and have not's."
A major obstacle to high-speed internet access on tribal land is the lack of infrastructure."
Ethically-tangled aspects of 21st century societies and cultures. In the vein of Charles Darwin’s 1859 “entangled bank” metaphor—a complex and evolving digital ecosystem of difference and dependence, where humans, technologies, ethics, law, policy, data, and information converge and diverge. Kip Currier, PhD, JD
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