Information and communications technology (ICT) includes the internet, social media platforms, smartphones, email, video conferencing, online forums, and all digital tools for communication and information sharing. ICT has profoundly transformed how communities form, communicate, and maintain themselves — with both enabling and limiting effects on community experience.
KEY TAKEAWAY: ICT creates new forms of community (online, global, interest-based) and enhances some aspects of existing communities, but it also raises concerns about the depth and quality of digital connections, the digital divide, and the potential for ICT to undermine physical community.
- ICT enables communities that would not have been possible geographically — people with rare interests, identities, or experiences can find one another online
- Online communities provide belonging for people who are geographically isolated (rural Australians, people with disabilities)
- Support communities (mental health, chronic illness, LGBTQ+) provide belonging to people whose needs are not met in local settings
- Maffesoli’s neo-tribes are amplified by ICT: fandoms, gaming communities, and social movements form rapidly around shared digital experience
2. Maintaining Existing Communities
- ICT allows diaspora communities to maintain cultural connections across distance (Vietnamese Australians connecting with family in Vietnam via WeChat; Greek Australians watching Greek TV)
- Community organisations use ICT to coordinate activities, share information, and maintain membership
- Social media enables weak-tie maintenance — people can stay connected with hundreds of acquaintances in ways not possible before digital communication
3. Mobilising Communities for Action
- Social movements use ICT to organise, communicate, and amplify their message (e.g. #MeToo, Black Lives Matter, Indigenous rights campaigns on social media)
- Online petitions, crowdfunding, and digital activism extend the reach of community action
- Local communities use Facebook groups, Nextdoor, and similar platforms to coordinate neighbourhood activities, share resources, and build local connections
APPLICATION: The Australian example of the 2023 Voice to Parliament campaign illustrates ICT’s role in both enabling (Indigenous voices and perspectives shared widely via social media; community organisations coordinating digitally) and limiting (misinformation spread rapidly online; echo chambers polarised debate) community engagement.
1. Reduced Face-to-Face Interaction
- Research suggests excessive screen time can reduce the quantity and quality of face-to-face social interaction
- “Phubbing” (snubbing someone in favour of a smartphone) disrupts community interaction in shared physical spaces
- Robert Putnam (Bowling Alone, 2000) argued that declining civic participation was partly a product of increasing private media consumption (television initially; argument extended to digital media)
2. Shallow and Transient Connections
- Online communities may provide the appearance of belonging without the depth of genuine community bonds
- Social media “likes” and follower counts substitute superficial metrics for genuine connection
- Maffesoli’s neo-tribes are typically weak-tie — digital communities may offer belonging without reciprocity or durability
3. The Digital Divide
- Not all Australians have equal access to ICT:
- Remote and rural communities often have poor internet infrastructure
- Elderly Australians may lack digital literacy
- Low-income households may not afford devices or data
- The digital divide means that ICT-enabled community can reinforce existing inequalities — those already marginalised are further excluded
- Indigenous communities in remote Australia face particular challenges: limited internet access limits participation in digital community life
4. Polarisation and Echo Chambers
- Social media algorithms tend to show users content that reinforces existing beliefs
- Online communities can become ideologically homogeneous echo chambers
- Polarisation can erode the social cohesion needed for broader community belonging
| Effect |
Enabling |
Limiting |
| New communities |
Global, interest-based belonging |
Shallow, transient ties |
| Existing communities |
Diaspora maintenance; coordination |
Reduced face-to-face contact |
| Community action |
Mobilisation, amplification |
Misinformation, polarisation |
| Access |
Broadened reach |
Digital divide; exclusion |
EXAM TIP: VCAA requires balanced analysis — never present ICT as purely positive or purely negative. For every enabling effect you describe, acknowledge a corresponding limitation. The digital divide is a frequently overlooked but important dimension — include it to demonstrate sociological depth.