The “information have-less” is a social, economic, and political category for millions of rural-to-urban migrants and laid-off
workers, who populate the vast gray zone of China's digital divide. Disengaged from institutions of agricultural and industrial
production, the information have-less make use of such inexpensive ICT services as Internet cafés, prepaid phone cards, and
Little Smart mobile phones. These low-end digital technologies are critical to enhancing labor mobility (both physical and
social) and to the formation of “translocal networks”. In this paper, we conduct a preliminary assessment of ICT usage in,
key city-regions in China and consider the consequences of translocal network formations for evolving information inequality
in China. These networks raise key theoretical issues related to regionalism, mobility, and state-firm relationships that
impinge on low-end service provision, and stratified patterns of information access and utilization within the have-less populations.
We view translocal networks an important socio-economic asset of the information have-less and an arena for the articulation
of labor mobility in China’s industrialization process and latest wave of urbanization.
Carolyn Cartier is associate professor of geography at the University of Southern California. She is the author ofGlobalizing South China (Blackwell, 2001) and the co-editor with Laurence J.C. Ma ofThe Chinese Diaspora: Place Space, Mobility and Identity (Routledge, 2003).
Manuel Castells is Wallis Annenberg Chair in Communication Technology and Society at the University of Southern California,
Research Professor at the Open University of Catalonia in Barcelona, and Professor Emeritus of Sociology and of City and Regional
Planning at the University of California, Berkeley. His current, research focuses on the social and economic implications
of the Internet and the debate on new development strategies for the Information Age.
Jack Linchuan Qiu is assistant professor at the School of Journalism and Communication, Chinese University of Hong Kong. He
co-founded and moderates the Chinese Internet Research Group, a network of researchers from the academic, policymaking, journalistic,
and activist communities.