Abstract
As digital technologies have become increasingly embedded in daily family life, there has been a growing international concern about children's protection, provision and participation rights in a digital environment. Recognising this, the Committee on the Rights of the Child published General Comment No. 25 Children's Rights in Relation to the Digital Environment (CRC, 2021), giving detailed advice on implementation issues in this area and calling for up-to-date research about children's digital lives. This paper makes a significant contribution to that much-needed knowledge base by reporting the findings of an online survey conducted with parents and legal guardians (n = 1444) (hereafter parents) of children aged 0–36 months across socially and ethnically diverse families in the four UK nations. The survey represented phase one of a larger three-phase project, ‘Toddlers, Tech and Talk’, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, which aimed to build an empirically robust body of knowledge about how 0-3-year-olds' lives intersect with digital technologies at home in socially and ethnically diverse families in inner-city, urban and rural communities. The survey found that nearly all family homes have Wi-Fi connection, that many homes have a wide range of digital devices and that very young children engage in a wide range of digital activities both with their parents and on their own. Parents' mediation practices are shaped by parental digital practices and attitudes, with concomitant implications for children's digital rights. Implications are highlighted.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 17 |
Journal | Children & Society |
Early online date | 25 Apr 2025 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published online - 25 Apr 2025 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2025 The Author(s). Children & Society published by National Children's Bureau and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Data Access Statement
The data on which this article is available on request and will be deposited on the UK Data Service in line with funding requirements from the Economic and Social Research Council.Keywords
- 0–3 years old children
- UNCRC children's rights
- digital technology
- family home
- parents