Maximizing opportunities and minimizing risks for children online: the role of digital skills in emerging strategies of parental mediation

Other authors

London School of Economics and Political Science

University of Akureyri

University of Leicester

Radboud University

Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (UOC)

Publication date

2019-04-11T07:54:09Z

2019-04-11T07:54:09Z

2017-01-11



Abstract

As Internet use becomes widespread at home, parents are trying to maximize their children's online opportunities while also minimizing online risks. We surveyed parents of 6- to 14-year-olds in 8 European countries (N = 6,400). A factor analysis revealed 2 parental mediation strategies. Enabling mediation is associated with increased online opportunities but also risks. This strategy incorporates safety efforts, responds to child agency, and is employed when the parent or child is relatively digitally skilled, so may not support harm. Restrictive mediation is associated with fewer online risks but at the cost of opportunities, reflecting policy advice that regards media use as primarily problematic. It is favored when parent or child digital skills are lower, potentially keeping vulnerable children safe yet undermining their digital inclusion.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Journal of Communication

Related items

Journal of Communication, 2017, 67(1)

https://academic.oup.com/joc/article-pdf/67/1/82/22321239/jjnlcom0082.pdf

Recommended citation

Livingstone, S., Ólafsson, K., Helsper, E.J., Lupiáñez-Villanueva, F., Veltri, G.A. & Folkvord, F. (2017). Maximizing opportunities and minimizing risks for children online: the role of digital skills in emerging strategies of parental mediation. Journal of Communication, 67(1), 82-105. doi: 10.1111/jcom.12277

0021-9916

10.1111/jcom.12277

Rights

(c) Author/s & (c) Journal

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Articles [216]