Integrating the internet

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Areheart, Bradley Allan
Stein, Michael Ashley

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

George Washington University

Abstract

This Article argues that the paradigmatic right of people with disabilities “to live in the world” naturally encompasses the right “to live in the Internet.” It further argues that the Internet is rightly understood as a place of public accommodation under antidiscrimination law. Because public accommodations are indispensable to integration, civil rights advocates have long argued that marginalized groups must have equal access to the physical institutions that enable one to learn, socialize, transact business, find jobs, and attend school. The Web now provides all of these opportunities and more, but people with disabilities are unable to traverse vast stretches of its interface. This virtual embargo is indefensible, especially when one recalls that the entire Web was constructed over the last twenty-five years and is further constructed every day. Exclusion from the Internet will cast an even wider shadow as an aging U.S. population with visual, hearing, motor, and cognitive impairments increasingly faces barriers to access. Unless immediate attention is given, the virtual exclusion of people with disabilities—and others, such as elders and non-native English speakers—will quickly overshadow the ADA’s previous achievements in the physical sphere.

Description

Keywords

Internet, People with disabilities, Antidiscrimination law, Public accomodation

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Areheart, BA & Stein, MA 2015, 'Integrating the internet', George Washington Law Review, vol. 83, no. 2, pp. 449-497.