Sunday, February 21, 2010

E-inclusion of elderly people

This paper has been prepared as a background paper for the workshop on the ethics of e-Inclusion in Bled during the Slovenia presidency of the European Union on 12-13 May 2008.

It is a huge success of science, health and social care that Europeans are getting older. At the same time, the ageing society poses significant challenges to Europe’s economy and society. To come to grips with these issues, we must be aware of their ethical dimension, in keeping with the social philosophy that permeates the European Union. Values are the heart of the European Union, as Article 1a of the Lisbon Treaty makes clear: “The Union is founded on the values of respect for human dignity, freedom, democracy, equality, the rule of law and respect for human rights, including the rights of persons belonging to minorities. These values are common to the Member States in a society in which pluralism, non-discrimination, tolerance, justice, solidarity and equality between women and men prevail.”

The notion of Europe as a community of values has various important implications, including the development of inclusion policies. The EU approach to e-Inclusion is chiefly based on moral considerations (although economic aspects are also important). Ethics are an integral part of the EU concept of e-Inclusion: “e-Inclusion is necessary for social justice, ensuring equity in the knowledge society.”

A special case of exclusion concerns the gap between those people with effective access to digital and information technology and those without access to it, the “digital divide”, which is in Europe chiefly age-related. Policies to overcome the digital divide and, more generally speaking, e-Inclusion policies addressing the ageing population raise some ethical problems. These problems can be categorised according to the age groups in which they are prevalent.

Among younger senior citizens, say those between 65 and 80 years old, the main issues are likely to be universal access to ICT and e-Participation. Corresponding ethical issues include:
Justice – Is it ethically tenable, according to a principle of justice, that senior citizens are excluded from the digital revolution? What would be the political consequences for Europe if a principle of justice is not respected? How can different types of justice – distributive, retributive, restorative, etc. – be harmonised?

Human rights – Could universal access to ICT be justified in terms of rights theory? If so, would it be a liberty or a claim right? Who would be obliged to implement such a right?

Privacy and data protection – How could one find a balance between dependence needs and respect for autonomy? Do senior citizens have specific privacy needs? How could older people protect themselves or be protected from any detrimental effects of pervasive ICT?

Among the older senior citizens, say those more than 80 years old, the main issues are mental and physical deterioration and assistive technology. Ethical concerns are likely to include
Respect for dignity – which includes respect for older people’s right to life and to integrity;
Right to integrity – which includes some complex issues such as somatic surveillance, human experimentation, informed consent,
Solitude, loneliness and social isolation – which include issues raised by digital communication, the social web and robotic companions.

The mixture of different levels in education, personal stories, skills and capabilities prevalent among older individuals (as well as among the general public) suggests that we eschew single instrument thinking. An approach geared towards the protection of human rights could instead match the different needs of the ageing and provide concrete guidance to evaluate technological items for senior citizens.

To assist decision-makers in deciding how and when a given innovation is better, it might be worthwhile considering the following principles3:
• As technology embodies and reinforces values, evaluation requires making values explicit.
• As innovations can perform effectively only as part of socio-technical networks that embody multiple needs and expectations, the shielding and enabling effects of technology need to be articulated in relation to both current and potential practice.
• As technology, in particular, assistive and health care technology, is a public-private good open to public policy interventions, reflexive science is produced within socio-political projects. Feedback should be sought when a given technology is introduced in a given context, for instance, in
nursing homes.
• As the framing of policy is vital, civil society should be made a pivotal locus of transparent and public deliberations when the interests of senior citizens in a given place at a given time are at stake (platforms).
• As industry develops technology largely on the basis of its own logic, the role of the private sector within publicly funded systems, such as health care systems, needs to be made explicit.

Finally, as part of the future agenda, we recommend monitoring carefully three main emerging areas:
• social technologies, robots and virtual friends for senior citizens,
• anti-ageing technologies and body enhancement in ageing,
• neuro-cognitive technologies and surveillance technologies for mentally impaired senior citizens.

In an article in The New York Review of Books, Alain Finkielkraut responded to the question “What is Europe” by saying that Europe embodies “a certain idea of culture, which can be best defined by the
words: autonomy of the spirit”.4 This definition, which was written in 1985 – well before the fall of the Berlin Wall, the rapid growth of globalisation, the enlargement of the Union, 9/11 – is not only still valid, but also grounds the normative cohesion of European construction and the European identity as a unified subject. The EU Committee of the Regions (CoR) elaborated somewhat this idea as follows:

The notion of Europe as a community of values has various important implications, not the least of which are those that concern European growth and economic development and the construction of the European Research Area. In January 2006, following a decision taken at the Hampton Court Summit during the UK presidency, an Independent Expert Group on R&D and Innovation produced a report on how to fully integrate research into the strategic plan of the EU with regard to economic growth and economic development.6 The Group, chaired by Esko Aho, the former Prime Minister of Finland, provided a comprehensive analysis of the fundamental steps to take to put research into the core of economic development, from an investment in research and development of 3 per cent of GDP to the creation of innovation-friendly markets, from financial mobility and venture capital to mobility in organisations and knowledge.

In addition to its economic considerations, the Aho Report advocated reinforcing European values as integral to an effective EU growth policy. Such values also need economic growth in some cases to be affordable to EU MS societies. Equality, health, social cohesion and common security are therefore indicated as elements that facilitate innovation though they are not sufficient by themselves to ensure sustainability. “Equality, solidarity, justice” are all elements that belong to the set of shared values contained in the European Charter of Fundamental Rights and that contribute to the notion of Europe as a value community. Furthermore, ethics are embedded and legally binding in the Sixth and Seventh Framework Programmes and, as such, characterise research and development policy within the EU and beyond (see the EC Communication on the European Research Area).

In parallel, the revised Lisbon Strategy (2005) and other relevant economic policy, e.g., the Renewed Sustainable Development Strategy (2006) and the EU budget review (2007), have attributed a key role to science and technology in the economic dimension of the EU. Research has become a main
component of the Lisbon agenda, both in terms of strategic importance and financial means. In 2007, it has become the third most important portfolio of the EU (after structural funds and agriculture).

Several new instruments support the role of FP7 in EU welfare, including the European Technology Institute (agreed by the Council in December 2007), where technology-oriented research and industry are to collaborate, the European Research Council, where basic research is to develop rapidly in terms of financial support and priorities, the technology platforms, where different stakeholders from science, industry, society, etc., are developing specific strategic sectors as well as other new tools and infrastructure intended to boost research excellence while, in the words of Mr Aho, “reinforcing European values”.

The Aho report stressed the key role of the ICT sector in innovation and as one of the five main research axes to promote in the EU. The link between the EU fundamental values, which are conducive to public acceptance and opening the EU market, remains, however, to be explored in its complexity. Both public perception and respect of fundamental rights are key elements conducive to the promotion not only of responsible science as set out in FP7 but also of industrial and research applications of ICT consistent with societal goods and values.

Recent political decisions have reinforced this need. At the European Council of 13 December 2007, the EU Heads of State and Government signed the EU Reform Treaty in Lisbon. The Reform Treaty (now more generally known as the Lisbon Treaty) clearly indicates a set of European values, such as human dignity, freedom, democracy, human right protection, pluralism, non-discrimination, tolerance, justice, solidarity and gender equality.7 These values are stated in the Charter of Fundamental Rights of
the European Union,8 proclaimed by the Presidents of the three EU institutions (Council, Commission and European Parliament) on 12 December 2000 and will constitute the key frame for design and implementation of EU policies, from research to security, from immigration to energy and climate change. The presupposition that EU policies have to be consistent with the fundamental rights as stated in the European Charter implies that ICT research activities and policies also need to address these new dimensions. More specifically, this means that all European policies – beyond their obvious and explicit targets – have the general goal to promote and pursue European ethical principles worldwide, as clearly stated in the Commission’s Green Paper on the European Research Area.9
European research policy… should experiment with new ways of involving society at large in the definition, implementation and evaluation of research agendas and of promoting responsible scientific and technological progress, within a framework of common basic ethical principles and on the basis of agreed practices that can inspire the rest of the world.

Article 6 of the Seventh Framework Programme requires EU-funded activities not to contravene fundamental values. Article 15 of the FP7 Rules for Participation also states that any proposal which contravenes fundamental ethical principles or which does not fulfil the conditions set out in the
specific programme, the work programme or in the calls for proposals shall not be selected and may be excluded from the evaluation, selection and award procedures at any time. FP7 first provided also specific guidance for ethics in ICT.10 The main issues mentioned by this guidance include:
• privacy and informed consent,
• use of animals in ICT research,
• ICT implants and wearable computing,
• e-Health and genetics,
• ICT and bio- and nano-electronics.

In parallel with FP7, various EC communications (e.g., on RFID, e-Inclusion, privacy-enhancing technologies, i-2010) have advocated the need to promote ICT oriented to social goods and consistent with EU fundamental values, another area which needs proper analysis.

The Commission staff working paper “Science, society and the citizen in Europe”"11, published in November 2000, advocates the consideration of ethical issues and societal concerns in research practices. The document states that the relationship between science and society today is something of a paradox. First of all, science and technology are at the heart of the economy and society, and both are having an increasingly positive effect on the lives of people in Europe… Conversely, advances in knowledge and technology are greeted with growing scepticism, even to the point of hostility, and the quest for knowledge no longer generates the unquestioning enthusiasm that it did some decades ago. Searching questions are being asked of the social and ethical impact of the forward march of knowledge and technology and the conditions under which the basic choices are made (or are not made) in this area.

To help implement this policy paper, the Commission published its Science and Society Action Plan in December 2001.12 The action plan strongly emphasises the need to establish public dialogues on new technologies at the European level.

Most policies have a scientific and technological dimension and decisions must be supported by transparent, responsible opinions based on ethical research. It is therefore necessary to strengthen the ethical basis of scientific and technological activities, to detect and assess the risks inherent in progress, and to manage them responsibly on the basis of past experience.

Actions 30 and 31of the Science and Society Action Plan specifically address the need to study the ethical implications of new technologies:
Action 30: An open dialogue will be established between NGOs, industry, the scientific community, religions, cultural groups, philosophical schools and interested groups, stimulating an exchange of views and ideas on a range of critical issues, such as the ethical impact of new technologies on future generations, human dignity and integrity, ‘info ethics’ and sustainability. A variety of mechanisms will be used (focus groups, polling exercise, e-debates, workshops or institutional forums, etc).

Action 31: The level of awareness among researchers of the ethical dimension of their activities is rather uneven in Europe. Actions to raise awareness of good scientific practices, including the ethical dimension, research integrity and the key elements of European legislation, conventions and codes of conduct should be encouraged.

Two Opinions of the European Group on Ethics in Science and New Technologies13 have also advocated the embedding of ethics and societal considerations in ICT policy design and implementation as well as opening debates on the societal implications. Similar messages have been stated in the eContentplus 2008 Work Programme14 and the Communication on Radio-frequency identification (RFID) in Europe: steps towards a policy framework15.

3 Inclusion, e-Inclusion and ethics
In the social sciences, inclusion refers to a process, de facto and/or de jure, of including people in a given social structure, most often, in society at large. Conversely, social exclusion describes “the inability of our society to keep all groups and individuals within reach of what we expect as a society...[or] to realise their full potential”16.
The complex dynamic between the individual (his or her character, selfhood, exceptionality) and the community (its commonality, purpose, unity, momentum) is one of the main specific features of any human society. In order to survive, humans must live together and since infanthood, human beings face the acute awareness of their dependence on other human beings. Such a dependence is destined to last quite a long time beyond the standard mother-newborn dependence in other species.17
Dependence – in the sense of having one’s want correctly anticipated and met – may be a pleasant state for a short period of life, but sooner or later, frustrations and obligations entailed by dependence become too burdensome. Humans develop awareness of the conflict between their dependence needs and the individual nature of their personal desires, which require a certain degree of liberty and autonomy to be fulfilled. In fact, the most prominent aspect of human society is the way in which
individuals deal with social obligations and the unavoidable charge of resentment and frustration carried out by these obligations. Even in the least structured human groups, it is possible to see traces of the tension between the “pleasure” of being dependent and the “desire” to be autonomous18 and to be left alone.

Since the time of the Greek philosophers, ethics have been evoked to mitigate the tension between individuals and community.19 However, social bonds can be justified without resorting to ethical categories. For instance, according to Thomas Scheff20, individualist societies have institutionalised two major defences against the loss of social bonds. One, he says, is the “myth of individualism, and the denial and repression of the emotions”, and the second follows from this: a simplification of
human nature and social order by the exclusion of social feelings, solidarity, for instance, and, in general, emotions. One should include individuals in the society chiefly because they can contribute to the common wealth and can receive from this common wealth accordingly. We should also open up the market to previously marginalised sectors of the society in order to enlarge markets. In the extreme version of this theory, only people who can remain active, either as producers or consumers, are worth being included.

Although an echo of a pure economic theory can be traced in EU policies on e-Inclusion (e.g, the emphasis accorded to the need to promote “active” living), it is indisputable that the EU approach to e-inclusion is based on a different vision. Ethics are an integral part of the EU concept of e-Inclusion:
“e-Inclusion is necessary for social justice, ensuring equity in the knowledge society”21.
On 11-13 June 2006, the European Commission, together with the Latvian Government and the Austrian Presidency of the EU, organised a high-level conference on the theme “ICT for an inclusive society” in Riga. The conference included an informal meeting of Ministers, where Ministers of the EU Member States and accession and candidate countries, European Free Trade Area (EFTA) countries and other countries adopted a Declaration on e-Inclusion, commonly known as the “Riga Declaration”22. The Riga Declaration explicitly calls for increasing ethical awareness:
Particular attention must be paid to further improve user motivation towards ICT use, as well as trust and confidence through better security and privacy protection. Furthermore, greater gender balance in the
information society remains a key objective and Realising increased quality of life, autonomy and safety, while respecting privacy and ethical
requirements.

The centrality of ethical issues in e-Inclusion has been further reasserted by the Communication on Ageing well in the Information Society.23 Solutions can only bring benefits if users have access to basic ICT facilities, have the appropriate education and motivation, and ethical and psychological issues are properly addressed. There is no specific reference point for ethics in ICT for ageing, for example, in safeguarding human dignity and autonomy where solutions require a degree of monitoring and intervention.

The concept is also affirmed in the associated Commission Staff Working Paper:24
With the emergence of ICT and ageing new ethical questions are being raised. These questions find their origin in the vulnerability of the user, the changing characteristics of the user population (e.g. more
people surviving at high age but also the trend towards more educated and empowered users), economic constraints such as public budgets that are at tension with serving all fully in health and social care and the constant renewal of science and technology.

Still more specifically, the recent Communication “European i2010 initiative on e-Inclusion - To be part of the information society”25 indicates that It is also important to raise awareness of the risks involved in processing personal data through ICT networks and educate users in this field, e.g. risks of identity theft, discriminatory profiling or continuous surveillance.

Yet until the Seventh Framework Programme, there have been few systematic, co-ordinated initiatives on ethics and e-Inclusion.26

4 Ageing and e-Inclusion
4.1 The digital divide is a special case of social exclusion
Social exclusion may take various forms, one of which is the gap between those people with effective access to digital and information technology and those without such access, otherwise known as the “digital divide”. Reflection on the digital divide started in the 1990s, some years after industry, governments and academia began talking about an “information highway” linking all citizens to the Internet. The opening lecture of the first Information Superhighway Summit, in January 1994, clarified the high ambitions of this highway. “We have a dream for...an information superhighway that can save lives, create jobs and give every American, young and old, the chance for the best education available to anyone, anywhere.” The speaker was Al Gore, then Vice President of the US.

The Summit was enthusiastic about the growing Internet and Web. It underlined that growth alone is not enough but that access to the Internet could play a vital role in empowering individuals and promoting their quality of life. It also underlined the need to promote universal access to the Internet.
In the mid-1990s, the phrase “digital divide” was coined. This “digital divide” was not merely perceived as a neutral parameter describing some normal characteristics of society. It was seen as an indicator of a shortcoming of the information highway and as an appeal to society to solve this problem.

In the EU, policies emanating from DG Employment and Social Affairs27 address active inclusion (linked to the labour market and better access to promote the integration of the most disadvantaged people), decent housing and homelessness (in order to minimise poverty and social exclusion), inclusion of vulnerable groups (including people with disabilities, migrants and ethnic minorities, homeless people, ex-prisoners, drug addicts, people with alcohol problems, isolated older people and children). DG Information Society and Media has also focused on the digital divide, especially in ICT terms.

DG Information Society and Media adopted the notion of e-Inclusion which “refers to the actions to realise an inclusive information society, that is, an information society for all”. The main goal of e-Inclusion is improving ICT access for disadvantaged groups and populations, particularly for people with disabilities and senior citizens. The EC’s RTD Framework Programmes, including the Competitiveness & Innovation Framework Programme (CIP), have been the main instruments used by the EC to develop its policy on e-Inclusion.28

4.2 The digital divide is age-related
In Europe, the digital divide is basically age-related. According to the European Commission’s 2005 Benchmarking Report, 38 per cent of EU citizens were regular users of the Internet, but only 8 per cent of people over 65 were regular users. The digital divide cannot be characterised solely as a consequence of socio-economic variables nor can it be conceptualised solely in terms of socioeconomic priorities. Social dynamics, personal motivations and cultural elements are as important as economic factors. Digital inclusion, in practice, implies changes affecting all these threads of the social fabric and promises benefits to society including economic development, health care improvements and enhanced levels of social inclusion.

From a technological perspective, these changes may range from the development of lower-cost, highly accessible technologies to the creation of applications that engage and motivate individuals to interact with ICT because it enhances their personal lives and their roles within family and community. Given that the digital gap is highly impacted by factors related to age and levels of education29, much of the work of closing this gap is contingent upon providing technologies and solutions that particularly address the unique physical needs of senior citizens as well as those who may be less educated and uncomfortable or unfamiliar with the traditional desktop computing environment which has become the hallmark of current day ICT.

Access to communications networks continues to slowly improve through decreases in cost and increased geographical availability of broadband networks. A great deal of research and development effort has been, and continues to be, focused upon assistive technologies, wherein the human interface with ICT is made more effective in dealing with physical constraints that may affect senior citizens and/or the disabled.
However, most of these changes tend to focus upon providing new methods to access the same traditional ICT delivery mechanisms that have been in place for decades. Beyond this, innovations are being realised to bring about what was envisioned by researchers in the late 1980s as ubiquitous computing, where computers would be invisibly embedded within one’s environment and which would focus upon interfaces that connected humans to each other, rather than ones that connected humans with computers.30

These innovations, though they have not yet achieved a truly pervasive level, and more likely to be seen today as individual applications and products, are positioned to provide services to a broader range of users than the typical desktop computing system. Combined with the ever-expanding scope of wireless communications technology, ambient devices or sensors embedded within a building, a room, in clothing, in a sidewalk or on one’s body require little or no knowledge of technology on the part of the individual. They do not require the user to have a high level of education nor, in many cases, even literacy. However, once such technologies are embedded within an environment, they do not necessarily provide the user, or subject, of the technology with an opportunity to decide whether or not to make use of it. A sensor affixed to one’s skin is collecting and transmitting data to one’s doctor on an ongoing basis; a sensor in a doorway will monitor one’s passage from room to room; a load sensor in the floor might determine one’s weight, whether or not this is information one wishes to share with the applications accepting and using the data.31 All these technological changes will alter where, when, how and how often each individual interacts with ICT, redefining the concept of the technology user dramatically. However, closing the gap is also a function of change from the perspective of the individual, and other key factors that are driving the closing of this gap, particularly within the community of senior citizens, have been speculated to include:
• Demographics – As the current work force ages, will an infusion of more technology-savvy retirees into a community encourage greater dialogue about ICT? Will such a dialogue lead to an increased use of ICT for services, information and support?
• Globalisation and migration – Will the physical distance between families sufficiently motivate senior citizens to take up use of e-mail or video conferencing to keep in touch with their grandchildren?
• Viral applications – Once engaged in the use of ICT for one purpose, will the natural curiosity of the individual cause him or her to seek out new uses of ICT to enhance their social interactions and support their daily activities?
• Financial opportunity – Will the prospect of reaching a growing marketplace encourage enterprises to innovate and develop more services and products targeted to better meet the needs of an underserved market segment?
These are some of the forces that are slowly but surely beginning to drive uptake of ICT towards the “tipping point”. To close this gap effectively, the desire or need for ICT-based services from the user’s perspective must accelerate its convergence with the applications and services being offered by technology, service, communications and content providers to create an efficient market in which they can deliver on the promise of a socially inclusive environment.

5 Ethics of e-Inclusion of senior citizens
5.1 Who are the senior citizens?
Although ageing is a biological process, age definition chiefly results from cultural and societal conventions.32 Our passage through time is a made up by a series of age-graded roles that we fulfil both simultaneously and sequentially. Each role has its own social clock for adjudging the ageappropriateness of various role performances, such as the “right” time for getting married, starting a family, “peaking” in one’s career, retiring and so on. Societies not only differ in how they value age, but in how they categorise age.33
The difficulty of defining senior citizens as a homogeneous class of persons in need of protection without making reference to context and personal conditions has consequences for the implementation of e-inclusion policies. In particular, it has consequences for the forging of an ethics capable of guiding, protecting and promoting the participation of senior citizens in particular and of people in general to the functioning of the (information and communication) society. The categorisation of senior citizens, as a result of socio-cultural determinism, emerges critically as one proceeds to identify and overcome the obstacles and satisfy the needs of senior citizens for ICT.
Contemporary societies are only roughly described as “ageing societies” but the general trend is more complex. Two events characterise current ageing processes: the naissance of an extended middle age applying to the post-65 age group (which could be called the “third age”) and the creation of a “fourth age” (older senior citizens).
The term “middle age” was a concept popularised in the 1960s to indicate a grey area between adulthood (30-40 years old) and retirement (affecting those 65 years and older). “Extended middle age” is now the term commonly used to indicate a continuation of this period but a change in circumstances (e.g., retirement). During extended middle age, the main physical and mental abilities remain unaltered though the person is ageing and gradually forced into the role of the senior citizen. As such, he or she is better profiled in terms of desired activity patterns, job opportunities, desired life habits, desired conditions rather than medical and social needs.
The “fourth age” applies to older senior citizens, people in their eighties and nineties. In this period, practically all people show substantial losses in physical mobility and cognitive functioning.
Furthermore, with advanced age, it has generally been assumed that people express fewer positive emotions and often a sense of loneliness. Recent research suggests that, despite these losses, older people are, in fact, among the happiest.34
This scenario explains why most current statistics and demographic studies addressing ICT and senior citizens run the risk of being misleading. Most available studies, including the most recent Eurobarometer surveys, do not clearly differentiate between younger and older senior citizens and tend to lump together everyone over 65. Instead, at least as far as ICT is concerned, one can distinguish two different demographic groups.
Among the younger senior citizens, the digital divide is more likely to be an issue of concern. They need to defend themselves against ageist prejudice, which can constrain their rights and inhibit or prevent access to new technologies. The main e-Inclusion goals in regard to this group are the first two mentioned in the Ageing Well Action Plan:
• Ageing well at work or ‘active ageing at work’: staying active and productive for longer, with better quality of work and work-life balance with the help of easy-to-access ICT, innovative practices for adaptable, flexible workplaces, ICT skills and competencies and IT enhanced learning (resp. e-skills and elearning).
• Ageing well in the community: staying socially active and creative, through ICT solutions for social networking, as well as access to public and commercial services, thus improving quality of life and reducing social isolation.
With older senior citizens, it makes less sense to focus only on discrimination and ageism. Although these issues remain important and need to be addressed in the context of this group too, it is worth focusing more on the assistive role of ICT. In this group of senior citizens, the lack of universal access to ICT might lead to a loss of independence and to an overall degradation in quality of life. The main e-Inclusion goal with these people is the third mentioned in the Ageing Well Action Plan:
• Ageing well at home: enjoying a healthier and higher quality of daily life for longer, assisted by technology, while maintaining a high degree of independence, autonomy and dignity.
Needless to say, these demographic groups overlap (some people age and deteriorate faster than others or, to put it differently, some people remain active and healthier longer han others). Even so, one can distinguish different needs and different ethical implications. With the caveat that we consider our two groupings as a tool for organising arguments, we can categorise e-Inclusion ethical issues involving senior citizens in two major clusters: first are those issues arising from e-Inclusion of younger senior citizens and, second, those issues arising from the e-Inclusion of older senior citizens.
6 The younger senior citizens
The existing group of younger senior citizens are the main victims of the digital divide and could be consequently the main beneficiaries of measures for overcoming it. Younger senior citizens are a heterogeneous population, which includes very different subgroups according to socio-economic, cultural and geographical variables.35 Their actual physical and mental conditions put them closer to the middle-aged than to the older senior citizens group. The dramatic demographic change, with an increase of 10 or 20 years in life expectancy, achieved in the last few decades, has largely outpaced cultural and societal conventions about ageing and notions about who are the aged. People who would be considered chronologically older according to a standard description are actually biologically and psychologically middle-aged. Consequently, younger senior citizens face a twofold challenge. First, they have to deal with a change in their social status (e.g., as a retiree, grandfather or whatever) which is not consistent with their actual physical and mental conditions. Second, they have to face agerelated exclusion, i.e., they have to prevent their being socially marginalised due to their age.

Existing younger senior citizens grew up in the 1940s and 50s, in a pre-digital age, and they suffer from various limitations that impair their embrace of digital technologies.36 Although the majority of Europeans aged 65 and over are open-minded towards new technologies and many have already gained hands-on experience with a computer, their full acquaintance with these technologies is limited by factors that prevent accessibility to ICT resources.37

The importance of overcoming the age-related digital divide in this group of senior citizens goes beyond the obvious need to prevent marginalisation of a large number of EU citizens who could still remain active and contribute fruitfully to European growth and development. Though this objective might be laudable, it cannot be the core argument if one takes seriously the definition of Europe as a community of values. Allowing an age-related digital divide to continue does not make economic sense and, in any event, it is an ethical offence.

6.1 Justice
An age-related digital divide is an offence to the principle of justice, which should be the cornerstone of any well regulated polity. Justice is the foundation of trust. Society members trust authorities if they think that authorities are just, that is, when they perceive that they are treated honestly, openly and with consideration. When principles of justice operate ineffectively, confidence in society’s institutions is undermined. Citizens or group members may feel alienated and withdraw their commitment to institutions perceived as unjust. EU institutions, like others, have often been accused of suffering from a democratic gap.

Justice can be conceptualised as fairness (at least, for purposes of this paper), which includes fair distribution (distributive justice), fair and reliable procedures (procedural justice), fair retribution for evil and good done (retributive justice), and proper restoration of evil done (restorative justice).38 The age-related digital divide offends the principle of distributive justice. Senior citizens expect to receive their share of a crucial common good such as digital technologies. It is important, however, to emphasise that the principle of fair distribution tends to stress the commodity function of ICT, which is obviously important but not exhaustive. Digital technologies are goods, but not only goods. Digital technologies are also instruments to reach other goods; they are enabling technologies, which allow them to fulfil important material, social and human goals. In such a sense, the age-related digital divide contravenes the principle of procedural justice, which calls for the adoption of fair procedures.

A society in which senior citizens are excluded from digital technologies is a society in which democratic participation is impaired. In other words, digital literacy not only opens the possibility to participate by all those who run the risk of being excluded, but also is a building block in the decision-making processes in modern states (e-Government). If senior citizens cannot fully participate in democratic procedures, this jeopardises democracy. The age-related digital divide involves retributive justice too. It is morally untenable that senior citizens, who have contributed more to the growth and development of the whole polity, should be excluded from the benefits of the digital revolution.

Finally, the age-related digital divide contravenes restorative justice. Senior people who are suffering from physical and mental limitations have been often damaged by unhealthy foods and habits (which have often been promoted by the market), polluted environments, unsafe working conditions, inadequate medical treatments and so on. They deserve a proper restoration for the evils suffered because of their active participation in the labour market and their adoption of society-induced life styles. If ICT can contribute to this restoration, by addressing the limitations suffered by senior citizens, it would be unjust not to offer them such a restoration.
The notion of justice applied to the age-related digital divide raises a number of challenging political issues which deserve further in-depth enquiry taking into account the different definitions of justice, all of which are applicable to the e-Inclusion of senior citizens.

6.2 Human rights and ageism
When we consider the ethical issues that arise from the development and proliferation of new technologies, especially in the context of the inclusion or exclusion of senior citizens, such consideration must always be underpinned by the recognition of human rights and any legal implications, either positive or negative. This means that the diffusion and application of technologies must not impair fundamental human rights and should contribute to the values they embody. The European Charter of Fundamental Rights includes non-discrimination principles. Specific rights are mentioned for senior citizens: “The Union recognizes and respects the rights of the elderly to lead a life of dignity and independence and to participate in social and cultural life” and for persons with disabilities: “The Union recognizes and respects the right of persons with disabilities to benefit from measures designed to ensure their independence, social and occupational integration and participation in the life of the community.”

Universal access to communications and information services could be also categorised as an essential human right guaranteed to senior citizens. Universal access to digital technologies could be conceptualized both as a liberty right and a claim right. This poses some interesting issues about what should be assured and who is obliged to fulfil the right, as mentioned above.

Liberty rights are those rights which can be described as being free from something. Universal access to communication and information services can be considered a liberty right in the sense that digital technologies can empower people and free them from many constrictions and limitations. Most digital technologies have the potential to increase personal freedom (think of the Internet) and any lack of access to them may result in impairing individual liberty. Conceptualizing universal access to ICT in terms of a liberty right implies that the state’s main obligations should be the removal of any legal conditions which may prevent senior citizens from accessing new technologies. Of course, at least in Europe, it would not make sense to speak of legislation that directly prevents access to ICT by senior citizens. Yet, it would be true if one considers legislation that indirectly impairs access. For instance, a lack of policies that facilitate the development of an ICT infrastructure accessible to senior citizens, such as computers, networks, broadband or software, or the lack of considering seniors’ needs in setting ICT standards, such as senior-friendly human-machine interfaces, can be seen as examples of indirect ageism. In other words, e-Inclusion policies should target discrimination against senior citizens and promote affirmative actions, but there might not be a positive obligation to address senior citizens’ ICT needs by actively offering services.

The digital divide is an ethical problem that needs to be addressed by public policy. The underlying assumption is that the Internet should not simply be compared with so many other technologies and gadgets which society accepts as being distributed unequally among the population. Access to the opportunities of the Internet now is regarded as an essential element in our society and economy, just like access to food or clean air and water or health care.

At least some of the information that can be found on the Web and some of the possibilities of the Internet can be seen and defended as vital elements of modern individual and social life. At the social level, a central role is played by the understanding that our modern society is a Knowledge Society and that its social welfare and economic growth depend on the availability of knowledge and the innovative creation and use of new knowledge. The Internet is essential to this process. At the individual level, the Internet greatly enhances transparency. The Internet promotes a decentralisation of knowledge and breaks the monopoly on information controlled by those in power.

Universal access to ICT can be also conceptualized as a (positive) claim right, which is a right to have something. Without entering into the various subtleties of claim rights theory39., this notion logically
implies that one person’s possession of a right is equivalent to someone else’s possession of a duty – a duty, moreover, with the same content. It implies that senior citizens have the right to claim accessibility to ICT, including financial support, educational programmes designed for them, special content, etc. In other words, as there are specific schemes to ensure universal health insurance, there should be similar schemes to ensure universal digital access. This poses, however, some difficult political issues. If Member States were obliged to consider universal access to ICT as a positive right of all people living in the EU, the allocation of scarce resources would inevitably become a major debate. How could one prioritise policies for the implementation of universal access between different disadvantaged groups (e.g., senior citizens, marginalised young people, the disabled, migrants, etc.)?

Would it be politically and ethically tenable to prioritise in terms of age? Could resorting to other principles such as justice be helpful in solving some of these difficult issues?

6.3 Participation and privacy
Participation is a key concept in e-Inclusion, particularly in regard to the age-related digital divide, which is an important barrier to senior citizens’ participation in social affairs. Participation includes the environment around an individual, social structures and the whole of prejudices, adaptation and inter-personal skills. Participation includes things such as voting, contributing to democratic society by learning and/or teaching, and interacting with others. We must not lose sight of the possibility that while some people might be increasingly included in mainstream society, at least nominally, yet at the same time, they might experience an increasing restriction in their activities. This could happen to senior citizens, even in the context of e-Inclusion initiatives.
In its broadest sense, the right to participation refers to participation in public affairs, in what Habermas defined as the “public sphere”40, which embraces activities of civic associations, neighbourhood groups, social movements and social clubs, as well as formal procedures of governments. In other words, the domain of action of the public sphere should not be restricted to political institutions but should also include a vast array of social activities and networks. Two fundamental instruments define the right to public participation: the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the 1976 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. The Declaration is a statement of general principles. The right to participate is spelled out in similar language in Article 21 of the Declaration and Article 25 of the Covenant. Article 25 of the Covenant states:
Every citizen shall have the right and the opportunity, without … unreasonable restrictions:
(a) To take part in the conduct of public affairs, directly or through freely chosen representatives.
The right to participation implies three main elements: transparency (decisions should be taken in the clearest way), information (relevant information should be freely available) and reasoned decision (decisions should be justifiable).41 At least two of these three elements, transparency and information, can be facilitated by adopting information and communication technologies. The role of ICT in promoting participation was first emphasised in the European Commission’s seminal White Paper on Governance.42
Information and communication technologies have an important role…Providing more information and more effective communication are a pre-condition for generating a sense of belonging to Europe.
The principle was then reaffirmed by the e-Participation preparatory action43, and eventually by the recent e-Government programme44.
An important ethical problem, however, is the way in which e-Inclusion is used in regard to the tension between public and private spheres. The notion of e-Inclusion certainly underscores the importance of being included in families, groups, communities and networks but also emphasises the significance of being an independent individual, someone who has the possibility to “stand apart” from the intrusion of others. Indeed, among values accorded protection under European human rights law and together with the right to participation, there is the respect for private life and the protection of personal data45.
Alongside a negative right “to be left alone”, the right to privacy and data protection has evolved to include a positive function. The positive function of the right to privacy is two-fold. The first function is connected to the obligation, falling upon third parties, such as state authorities or service providers, to enable the individual “to control access to information about him or herself”. Lacking such a positive element, the protection of individual private life would be not effective, but merely formal.

The other feature of privacy’s positive function relates to the construction of the individual public sphere and to the importance of forging individualised relationships. This function’s aim is to enable the individual to develop his own personality within a network of other private human beings.

Anthropological studies and available privacy literature have demonstrated that what an individual is able to perceive around him or her “exercises a restrictive and/or steering influence over him/her”.46 In the same vein, what an individual is not able to perceive “exercises a restrictive and/or steering influence”. If one is prevented from exchanging private e-mails in the workplace47, or one receives only the news that fits one’s own profile48, one’s perception of others and of the world is seriously restricted. Under these conditions, individual privacy is endangered. Unless they engage in social relationships, individuals run the risk of conforming to dominant views and, fearing reprisal, dissent is silenced. This is detrimental to individual privacy as well as to the diversity and pluralism which are pillars of the democratic constitutional state. Protection of privacy, therefore, must also consider “the right to establish and develop relationships with other human beings”49 and, consequently, create conditions conducive to that end.

With regard to information and communication technologies, European data protection and privacy law protects the ability of the individual to gain and maintain control over ICTs and, in particular, over the flow of information that ICTs engender, compile and trade. Furthermore, the legal values and goods that the rights to privacy and data protection protect go beyond the sphere of the individual per se. With the storage, processing and data mining capabilities of modern technologies growing at a breath-taking pace, privacy and data protection can be seen as a constitutive value that safeguards participation and association in a free society. Information privacy rules normatively, and defines multidimensional, informational territories that insulate personal data from observation by outside parties.

From an ethical point of view, senior citizens should be shielded from the adverse consequences of pervasive ICT as they impinge upon the individual’s personal and social rights. ICT should empower them with the means to protect and pursue their rights. This, however, might not be enough. Modern technologies should also ensure that senior citizens are not insulated, but have a genuine access to other people or networks of people. Put under this light, a legal and ethical analysis should investigate requirements and values such as choice, consistency, consent (see below), confinement, context, inspection, ex post user control, adoption, protection, transparency and so on in the context of meeting the specific needs of senior citizens.

7 Older senior citizens
By older senior citizens, we mean people in their eighties and nineties. This demographic group is rapidly increasing in all developed countries and in Europe as a whole. This group of senior citizens is often suffering from various negative changes in their physical and mental abilities. Gerontologists often refer to these changes as increasing frailty.50 Frailty is a crucial concept in late ageing.51 Those who live to an advanced age will probably face it soon or later. Frailty is not really a disease but rather a combination of the natural ageing process and a variety of medical and social problems. Frailty not only undermines the quality of life, but also is a reliable predictor of a general decline in health, capacity of life in the community and personal autonomy. Frail citizens face an immediate future of deteriorated physical and mental conditions, reduced mobility, increasing disability, lack of autonomy, hospitalization and death. Consequently, the main goal of e-Inclusion in regard to older senior citizens should be containing frailty and promoting independent living.

Assistive technologies for older senior citizens include affective computing, memory assistance, robotics, ambient intelligence and sensors, ICT for physical and cognitive training, brain-computer interaction or more generally neuro-ICT interfacing, navigation systems, speech, sign and movement recognition, ICT for modelling and simulation of users and their interaction with devices (virtual user, virtual artefacts), ICT for social networking, automatic language translation, collaborative creativity, alternative communication environments and virtual worlds. All these technologies have important ethical implications.

7.1 Dignity
Although the notion of dignity has been considered sometimes as too metaphysically compromised (i.e., would it ever be possible to ground it without making an appeal to transcendent values?), the idea of human dignity is still the cornerstone of the EU constitutional architecture. The European Charter of Fundamental Rights affirms this in Article 1: “Human dignity is inviolable. It must be respected and protected.”

The concept of dignity is a vital element of e-Inclusion as well. The recent amendment to the Commission’s proposal to set up an Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) agency, approved by the European Parliament in March 200852, states: “When selecting projects following calls for proposals launched under the programme the following criteria should be met in addition to scientific excellence: technology must be adapted to the needs of the elderly, services must respect the privacy and dignity of the elderly.”

The principle of dignity affirms that any human being is priceless, literally invaluable, independent of their age, gender, socio-economic condition, ethnicity, religion, etc. There is no utilitarian consideration that may ever justify the sacrifice of a single human being for whatever reason (be it ideology, religion, science, philosophy and so on).
According to the Charter, dignity includes the
• right to life,
• right to the integrity of the person, which also implies the right to the free and informed consent of the person concerned,
• prohibition of torture and inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment,
• prohibition of slavery and forced labour. The rights to life and integrity are both relevant to ICT for older senior citizens.

7.1.1 The older senior citizen’s right to life
Older senior citizens are facing the last years of their lives. New technologies may offer a way to extend their lives in a more comfortable, more dignified condition. Underlying current approaches to anti-ageing technology, there are two principal scientific theories, one called “compression of morbidity” and the other called “indefiniteprolongation of life”.
The compression of morbidity theory affirms that it may be possible to reduce cumulative lifetime morbidity.53 Since chronic illness and disability usually occur in late life, cumulative lifetime disability could be reduced if primary prevention measures postponed the onset of chronic illness. However, decreases in health risks may also increase average age at death. The hypothesis predicts that the age at the time of initial disability will increase more than the gain in longevity, resulting in fewer years of disability and a lower level of cumulative lifetime disability. In its extreme version,54 the hypothesis states that we are moving towards a society in which everyone lives in good health up to their genetic limits and then quickly dies in a few days or weeks without becoming an economic burden for the society.

The hypothesis of the indefinite prolongation of life is even more optimistic. In this case, it is assumed that genetic limits can be overcome thanks to new biotechnologies (e.g., cloning, stem cells) and new nanomaterials (e.g., nanoprostheses, artificial body parts, enhancers, etc.) and that boundaries of human life can be pushed further, almost to immortality.55

Both hypotheses raise ethical issues of great complexity and profound significance. Contemporary techno-science shows an inescapable tendency to deny human limits, senescence and death. Yet it should be clear that there are some questions concerning life and death that do not admit a technical fix. In his short story, “The Immortal”, Jorge Luis Borges equates immortality with oppressiveness, irrationality and horror. For Borges, immortality is the nonsense of an infinite repetition without difference, and the immortals are troglodytes incapable of speech. Beyond these literary metaphors, assistive technologies for senior citizens pose serious questions about our motivations: do we really intend to address the needs of senior citizens or do we use them as an interesting test case for evaluating our new powerful technologies?56
7.1.2 The older senior citizen’s right to integrity
The right to the integrity means that one’s physical and psychological conditions should be respected and no one has the right to infringe them without explicit and informed permission. This principle is affirmed in a number of international and regional documents. It is also stated in Article 3 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union:
1. Everyone has the right to respect for his or her physical and mental integrity.
2. In the fields of medicine and biology, the following must be respected in particular:
— the free and informed consent of the person concerned, according to the procedures laid down by law,
— the prohibition of eugenic practices, in particular those aiming at the selection of persons,
— the prohibition on making the human body and its parts as such a source of financial gain,
— the prohibition of the reproductive cloning of human beings.
This principle holds true also for senior citizens and is vital when one considers assistive technologies destined to the older senior citizen. The body of the older person lies at the heart of various technological strategies. The body of the senior citizen is increasingly technologically altered through prosthesis, pacemakers, artificial sensors, drug dispensers, etc., and primed to be followed and located on a permanent basis. This is the purpose of under-skin chips containing medical data and nanosensors for continuous monitoring of physiological parameters, or for surveillance of older citizens suffering from dementia. There are also important implications that concern somatic surveillance, human experimentation in ICT for senior citizens, and informed consent.
7.1.2.1 Somatic surveillance
Foucault’s seminal intuition that “society exerts its control over individuals not only through conscience or ideology, but also in and with the body”57 is particularly valid for older senior citizens.
Examples already meriting the attention of researchers include behavioural pattern monitoring systems, in which behaviour patterns of elderly subjects are monitored and any changes detected are reported to care givers. Research to analyse changes in behavioural patterns over time to provide early warning of age-related diseases (such as Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s) is already being undertaken. Experts foresee that, within a decade, software efficient enough to spot early Parkinson’s symptoms will be commercially available. Modern information technology has also increased the possibilities for supervision and surveillance of elderly people. Relevant supervision technologies in the field of welfare services include sensors in exit doors warning about undesired movement and electronic tags for localisation of the elderly. While such technologies have undoubted benefits, they also pose serious ethical questions. What protocols should be followed when introducing technology for supervision?
What guidelines should an ethical review board follow when they evaluate clinical trials in this field?

What ethical frameworks should be constructed to protect senior citizens from abuse by researchers?
How can one ensure users’ control over the systems? Sensitive data produced by ICT services may represent an invaluable source of information for marketing departments of many companies and they could be covertly generated, stored and commercialised. Moreover, ancillary information generated by the system can be used for discriminating against ethnic groups and other minority groups. Certain technologies are particularly suited for generating shadow data (e.g., age, gender, skin colour, style in clothes, etc.) that could be used for illicit ethnic or religious classification.

Somatic surveillance58 is a concern in the medical domain. Increasingly, consumerist strategies promise “eternal youth” by manipulating the body through bio, info and nanotechnologies. As a result, the bodies of senior citizens especially are invaded by microtechnologies, reconstructed as nodes in vast information networks, and controlled through automated responses or network commands. This trend requires ethical reflections on the concept of respect for bodily and mental integrity in advanced ages. An important ethical tenet is that sensible data should not be required in return for essential services unless the information is essential for the proper execution of those services. This principle is clearly embedded in all relevant EU legislation.

7.1.2.2 Human experimentation in ICT for elderly
More and more often funding agencies and the EC require the ethical review of research protocols in the field of assistive technologies for the elderly. The EC has issued specific guidance for the ethical review of human experiments in ICT projects in the Seventh Framework Programme. There are, however, some important issues that still need to be addressed such as the following:
• Although being old cannot per se be considered a condition of vulnerability, there is no doubt that older senior citizens often suffer from social, mental and physical limitations (the condition of frailty) that make them a highly vulnerable population. Given that vulnerable populations deserve special attention in experimentation, is it be possible to define specific criteria for evaluating the vulnerability of senior citizens who take part in ICT research?
• Assistive technologies are often piloted in settings far from traditional medical settings, by actors who are not medical doctors, involving subjects who are not medical patients. This makes it very
difficult to apply rules developed in the context of medical research (e.g., there are no local ethical committees where to apply, it is not clear what could be a “standard” risk or whether the research is in the direct interest of the subject, etc.) to ICT research. Is it possible to develop more context-dependent guidance?
• Distinction between cares and cures, medical and social services are often blurred in the field of assistive technology experimentation. Moreover, different actors are involved, often posing double agent issues. Roles and responsibilities of different players need to be clarified for a more reliable ethical review.
7.1.2.3 Informed consent
Senior citizens can be categorised in several ways which helps to elucidate the issue of informed consent. Some senior citizens live independently in their own homes, while others require care by third parties, either from family members and/or professional care-givers. The latter category of senior citizens can be subdivided between those who require care, but live in their own homes and those who require care in a nursing home. Those who require care can be further subdivided between those who suffer from some physical disabilities and those suffering from mental impairment such as dementia or Alzheimer’s disease.
In the latter case, informed consent with regard to how ICTs are used to support them becomes more problematic, so much so that the deployment of technologies to track and monitor them may need to be subject to some guidelines and third-party oversight, for example, by family members and/or associations for the ageing and/or government inspectors.
With regard to the other categories of senior citizens, who are capable of understanding the benefits of the new technologies, they should be informed of how the technologies could or would be used and where there are potential privacy impacts or ethical concerns. While many senior citizens are undoubtedly willing to forego some potential loss of privacy in exchange for increased safety and security, nevertheless, they should be informed explicitly not only about the benefits, but also the risks
and what measures will be taken to minimise the risks. Service providers who deploy such technologies, for example, in projects, may wish to have the participating senior citizens sign consent forms, which should explain why the technologies are to be used, the perceived benefits and risks and mitigating measures, for example, how their data will be protected, who will have access to those data (including any images or video or audio recordings), how long the data will be stored, how they might be processed and so on. Even if a consent form is signed, it should not obviate the supplier or service provider’s liability.
In other instances, the initiative to deploy or use the technologies will not be taken by third parties, but will be taken by the senior citizens themselves. In such instances, senior citizens will be somewhat like the mainstream public who should be informed by service providers, manufacturers, suppliers and any other stakeholder putting products or services on the market. This obligation is like that imposed on pharmaceutical vendors who are required to supply information not only about what illness their product is designed to treat, but also about possible contraindications and what to do in the event that one or more of these contraindications arises.
The issue of what constitutes informed consent also needs to be considered, not only in the context of senior citizens, but more generally. Where there are information asymmetries between stakeholders – i.e., between suppliers and consumers – there is a risk that the consent will not be truly informed or that the consumer who gives his or her consent does so reluctantly, for example, if one wants to use the product or service, one must agree to the terms and conditions, even though one does not agree with all of those terms and conditions. In many situations, the information supplied may be too complex or abstruse for the consumer to understand (the privacy policies of many suppliers have been criticised as being too long, detailed, complex or ambiguous) or the consumer may not be willing to spend the time trying to decipher the information supplied. Other considerations may apply to the issue of informed consent, for example, where the consumer may suffer from some disability, e.g., visual or hearing impairment or impairment of physical dexterity. In such cases, technologies and/or services should be designed taking such considerations into account.
Third parties, including policy-makers and other government officials, may also need to give consideration to cases where the senior citizen is capable of understanding the benefits and risks of ICT, but chooses not to use a particular technology where nevertheless professionals believe that despite the senior citizen’s not consenting, he or she should be subject to the technology. One can imagine senior citizens with personality disorders, for example, who might never have committed any wrong-doing or harm to themselves, wittingly or unwittingly, but whom social workers nevertheless believe should be monitored or tracked because they represent a risk either to themselves or to others.
Policy-makers, suppliers and technology designers may also need to consider mechanisms by means of which they can be assured that the consumer truly has been informed, that he or she understands to what they are consenting and whether the consumer is given choices, e.g., to be able to opt out of some service without any negative repercussions.
The issue of informed consent with regard to the use of ICT involving senior citizens is not a simple one. Indeed, its complexity is such that ethical guidelines and perhaps regulatory measures are appropriate. Such guidelines should be constructed on the basis of (brief) scenarios that illuminate the various permutations where informed consent is desirable and/or mandatory.

7.2 Solitude, loneliness and social isolation
The notion of solitude comprises at least two different concepts, loneliness and isolation. Loneliness and isolation are often confused; there are important differences between being emotionally isolated (loneliness) and being socially isolated (isolation). Loneliness is the subjective perception of being deprived of a connection with other people, of being excluded from the community, of feeling alone, but not wanting to be. Loneliness is a psychological state: one can be in the midst of lots of people and yet not feel connected to them. Loneliness reflects a dissatisfaction with social relationships that the person has or does not have. Loneliness may elicit feelings of aggression and a desire for revenge59, which in turn inhibit the person’s ability to acquire and develop supportive relations and reconstruct his personal network. In other words, soon or later, loneliness leads also to isolation. Isolation is the objective condition of having too few and too poor social ties, of not being in any relevant social network. Isolation is the concrete condition of living alone. Both loneliness and isolation may be perceived in a positive way.60 One may wish to be alone (either emotionally and/or socially) in order to devote one’s self to the cure of something valued more than social ties. The Benedictine motto “Beata solitudo, sola beatitudo” is an example of such a positive understanding of solitude. The idea of solitude as a positive condition is also implicit in the notion of (emotional or social) independence. Such independence suggests a capacity to survive, or even to flourish, when social and/or emotional ties are weak or absent.
Despite stereotypes to the contrary, older senior citizens tend to feel isolation less distressful than younger people.61 Many older senior citizens do not view living alone as particularly distressful. Some deliberately seek to be alone as an expression of independence. Be that as it may, any prolonged solitude, emotional or social, is likely to impair people’s physical and mental conditions, as countless medical and psychological studies have shown.62 Researchers have demonstrated that both isolation and loneliness tend to accelerate the rate of physiological decline with age. This is particularly true of the frail older senior citizens, who are already physiologically and emotionally distressed.63
New technologies address both isolation and loneliness. Trends in family structures (e.g., declining birth rates, smaller families, single parent families, childless, rather than extended, families, etc.) and trends in mobility, which increase physical distance between generations of a family, have resulted in increasing social isolation. On the other hand, new forms of communication – from phone calls to emails, instant messaging, Web meetings, social networking, wireless personal area networks and so on – help to alleviate, if not overcome, isolation. Here, however, the digital divide is critical. Very often, older senior citizens are precluded from using new communication tools, which could help them to overcome isolation, because of their digital illiteracy, which may stem from several factors (lack of user friendly interfaces, appropriate education, familiarity with computer jargon, financial resources, etc.), as mentioned above. New digital technologies can also address loneliness. Sites such as Eons, Rezoom, Multiply, Maya’s Mom, Boomj and Boomertown are all examples of websites aimed at senior citizens. Although it is unlikely most older senior citizens could fully exploit these new social media, the second generation of the World Wide Web (Web 2.0) may increase social networking and interaction among older seniors.
In the near future, virtual friends may play an important role in the lives of senior citizens. Robotic pets for senior citizens are already a reality and they have proven to be as useful as real animals for senior citizens suffering from dementia.64 Japanese hospitals and senior citizens homes have been experimenting with robot therapy sessions.65 Some scientists believe robots are the answer to caring for ageing societies where the young might otherwise be overwhelmed by the surging population of senior citizens. These robots look like puppies and have built-in sensors enabling them to respond to both contact and a user’s voice, with either motion or speech. At the same time, these robots can be used to monitor the safety of older senior citizens because the interaction between them and their owners can be recorded and accessed remotely. A few robot companions are already in use – such as the “dogs” AIBO and SPARKY – and many others are in development.
The new communication technologies and robot companions do, however, raise ethical issues, ranging from privacy issues (older senior citizens are less likely to be able to defend themselves from informational intrusiveness) to more substantial objections (are we giving machines and virtual contacts to people who ask for warm human contacts?). Moreover, new communication technologies may diminish the interest in going outside the home, which would only compound the reduction in face-to-face contacts. All these issues could be categorised under the common heading of threats to the notion of self-respect. Being somehow forced to consider digital media and inanimate objects as the comprehensive universe of one’s own social life may become humiliating and may hurt self-respect.
In other words, the issue at stake is that of emotional dignity, as Badcott proposes to call situations that could elicit profound feelings of personal humiliation.66

8 Preparing for the future
Our societies have generated very high life expectancies, and the end of this process is far from being in sight. This development unavoidably leads us to think about the opportunities and the problems related to the intertwining of the increasing use of ICTs with a society becoming increasingly older.
This paper has pondered the concept of inclusion and the impact that politics of inclusion can have on society. It has reviewed the European path to e-inclusion by analysing the politics to tackle the digital
divide and by highlighting the opportunities and risks that bridging the digital gap involves. Coming to terms with concepts such as inclusion and digital divide is necessary to frame the discussion about the ethics and the laws that should guide the inclusion of individuals in general and older people in particular in the information and communication society.
An ethics of digitalisation which relies exclusively on the right to privacy, the right to data protection and on the informed consent of the individual would hardly satisfy the ethical, social and privacy needs in ICTs for senior citizens. While upholding these rights and concepts would satisfy certain needs of the individual and surely the requirements of formal legality of technologies, other goods which deserve ethical and legal protection would be lost if we were to apply them in their negative sense, viz. their function of protecting persons against intrusions. We need a flexible and dynamic ethics of digitalisation which takes into account not only the need to protect individuals from unlawful intrusions, but also the enabling side of privacy and data protection, namely, their ability to enable individuals, with different capabilities, to forge relationships, to stay authentically active in society, to express and share their views. If ICT systems, as the German Constitutional Court recently explained, appeal to a system of protection that is significant in terms of basic rights, the ethical and legal approach to ICTs could be broadened to include self-determination as a limit and guideline to the development, use and presence of information and communication technologies in society.

As explained above, the mixture of different levels in education, personal stories, skills and capabilities prevalent among older individuals (as well as among the general public) suggests that we eschew single instrument thinking. An approach geared towards the protection of human rights could instead match the different needs of the ageing and provide concrete guidance to evaluate technological items for the elderly. To assist decision-makers in deciding how and when a given innovation is better, it might be worthwhile considering the following principles:
• As technology embodies and reinforces values, evaluation requires making values explicit.
• As innovations can perform effectively only as part of socio-technical networks that embody multiple needs and expectations, the shielding and enabling effects of technology need to be articulated in relation to both current and potential practice.
• As technology, in particular assistive and health care technology, is a public-private good open to public policy interventions, reflexive science is produced within socio-political projects. Feedback should be sought when a given technology is introduced in a given context, for instance, in nursing homes.
• As the framing of policy is vital, civil society should be made a pivotal locus of transparent and public deliberations when the interests of senior citizens in a given place at a given time are at stake.
• As industry develops technology largely on the basis of its own logic, the role of the private sector within publicly funded systems, such as health care systems, needs to be made explicit.
Finally, we recommend that future agendas make room for the careful monitoring of these emerging areas:
• social technologies, robots and virtual friends for senior citizens,
• anti-ageing technologies and body enhancement,
• neuro-cognitive technologies and surveillance technologies for mentally impaired senior citizens.

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8 http://www.europarl.europa.eu/charter/pdf/text_en.pdf
9 European Commission, The European Research Area: New Perspectives, Green Paper, COM(2007) 161 final, Brussels, 4
Apr 2007. ec.europa.eu/research/era/pdf/era_gp_final_en.pdf
10 ftp://ftp.cordis.europa.eu/pub/fp7/docs/guidelines-annex5ict.pdf
11 ftp://ftp.cordis.europa.eu/pub/rtd2002/docs/ss_en.pdf
12 http://ec.europa.eu/research/science-society/pdf/ss_ap_en.pdf
13 Ethical issues of healthcare in the information society, Opinion No. 13, 30 July 1999; Ethical aspects of ICT Implants in
the Human Body, Opinion No. 20, 16 March 2005. http://ec.europa.eu/european_group_ethics/avis/index_en.htm
14 http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/activities/econtentplus/programme/workprogramme/index_en.htm
15 COM(2007) 96, Brussels, 15 March 2007. http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/policy/rfid/doc/rfid_en.pdf
16 Power, A., and W.J. Wilson, Social Exclusion and the Future of Cities, Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion, London
School of Economics, London, 2000.
17 Anthropologists call neoteny the tendency of mammals to remain dependant on other individuals and to exhibit juvenile
characteristics. Human beings present a higher level of neoteny.
18 E.g., Moore, B., Jr, Privacy: Studies in Social and Cultural History, Pantheon Books, 1984.
19 E.g., most virtues listed by Aristotle are actually attitudes such as friendship, honesty, trustfulness, solidarity, etc., which
are essential to overcome the conflict between the individual and the community.
20 Scheff, Thomas, Microsociology: Discourse, Emotion and Social Structure, University of Chicago Press, 1990.
21 European Commission, European i2010 initiative on e-Inclusion: “To be part of the information society”, Communication
from the Commission to the European Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the
Committee of the Regions, COM(2007) 694 final, Brussels, 8 Nov 2007.
22 http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/activities/e-Inclusion/events/riga_2006/index_en.htm
23 European Commission, Ageing well in the Information Society, Action Plan on Information and Communication
Technologies and Ageing, An i2010 Initiative, Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament, the
Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions, COM(2007) 332 final, Brussels,
14 June 2007. http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:52007DC0332:EN:NOT
24 Commission Staff Working Document, Accompanying document to the Communication from the Commission to the
European Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions, Ageing
well in the Information Society, SEC(2007) 811, Brussels, 14 June 2007.
25 COM(2007) 694 final. http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/activities/e-Inclusion/policy/i2010_initiative/index_en.htm
26 In the Sixth Framework Programme, the European Commission provided funding for quite a few projects dealing with e-
Inclusion and senior citizens. Several of these projects mention privacy and ethics, but few devote more than some short
paragraphs to the issues.
27 http://ec.europa.eu/employment_social/spsi/poverty_social_exclusion_en.htm
28 Additionally, at the EU level, the major initiative dealing with active ageing is the Ambient Assisted Living Joint
Programme, established on the basis of Article 169 of the European Treaty. Member States are co-operating within a
European framework for implementation of active ageing programmes and reduction of fragmentation of resources. The
AAL strategy is aimed at the needs of the ageing population, to increase autonomy and to facilitate all activities of daily
living by the use of remote services and intelligent products.
All EU Members States are promoting national initiatives for inclusion of the elderly. The majority of Member States have
several initiatives dealing with issues such as:
• accessibility to public services websites,
• specific content for senior citizens using new media,
• measures to avoid inhibitions to the use of ICTs by senior citizens,
• joint events for grandparents and grandchildren,
• networks of computer centres for senior citizens,
• courses for senior citizens on how to use PCs and the Internet, sometimes with the support of younger students.
The governance of e-Inclusion policies is delegated in some countries to ad hoc agencies such as councils for the elderly
and/or associations of senior citizens. Examples of these can be found in the Czech Republic, Austria and Finland, among
others.
29 Demunter, Christophe, “The digital divide in Europe”, Statistics in focus, 38/2005, Eurostat, 2005.
http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/cache/ITY_OFFPUB/KS-NP-05-038/EN/KS-NP-05-038-EN.PDF
30 Weiser, M., R. Gold and J. S. Brown, “The origins of ubiquitous computing research at PARC in the late 1980s”, IBM
Systems Journal, Vol. 38, No. 4, 1999. http://www.research.ibm.com/journal/sj/384/weiser.html
31 While these ambient technologies may overcome many of the accessibility-related issues of ICT, they themselves give rise
to a host of ethical questions which are addressed later in this paper.
32 Biologically speaking, there are only three life periods: (1) embryogenesis, i.e., the period in which the embryo is formed
and develops; (2) growth, which starts with the fetus and continues until puberty when the body becomes capable of
reproduction; and (3) senescence, the state or process of ageing which starts after puberty, which includes middle and old
age, and ends with death.
33 E.g., see Banner, Lois W., “Coming of Age: A Cultural Studies Approach to Aging”, Journal of Women's History, Vol. 12,
No. 4, Winter 2001, pp. 212-214. http://muse.jhu.edu/login?uri=/journals/journal_of_womens_history/v012/12.4banner.html
34 The research found that the happiest Americans are the oldest, and older adults are more socially active than
the stereotype of the lonely senior suggests. The research was based on periodic face-to-face interviews with a
nationally representative sample of about 28,000 Americans from 1972 to 2004. Author of the study Yang Yang,
a University of Chicago sociologist, said “Life gets better in one’s perception as one ages.” Associated Press,
“With Age Comes Happiness, Research Shows”, 18 Apr 2008.
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/04/18/health/main4027635.shtml
More details of the research can be found in Yang, Yang, “Social Inequalities in Happiness in the United States,
1972 to 2004: An Age-Period-Cohort Analysis”, American Sociological Review, Vol. 73, No. 2, April 2008.
http://www.asanet.org/cs/root/leftnav/publications/journals/american_sociological_review/homepage#articles
35 For instance, in Europe, the digital divide is also geographically determined; it is more important in the south than in
northern Europe.
36 The next younger generation of senior citizens will comprise the baby boomers, who are already very familiar with
technology, a fact which is likely to produce a very different scenario.
37 Demunter, Christophe, “How skilled are Europeans in using computers and the Internet?”, Eurostat, 7 June 2006.
http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/newsroom/cf/news.cfm?redirection=1&item_type=library&tpa_id=40
38 Tyler, Tom R., and Maura A. Belliveau, “Dealing with Tradeoffs Among Justice Principles: The Motivational Antecedents
of Definitions of Fairness”, in Barbara B. Bunker and Jeffrey Z. Rubin (eds.), Conflict, Cooperation and Justice, Jossey Bass
Inc. Publishers, 1995, p. 291.
39 E.g., Sreenivasan, Gopal, “A Hybrid Theory of Claim-Rights”, Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, Vol. 25, No. 2, 2005, pp.
257-274. http://ojls.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/25/2/257
40 Habermas, Jürgen, The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere: Inquiry into a Category of Bourgeois Society, MIT
Press, Cambridge, MA, 1989.
41 See Söderman, Jacob, “Transparency as a Fundamental Principle of the European Union”, European Ombudsman, 19 June
2001. http://www.euro-ombudsman.eu.int/speeches/en/2001-06-19.htm
42 European Commission, European Governance: A White Paper, COM(2001) 428 final, Brussels, 25 July 2001.
http://ec.europa.eu/governance/white_paper/en.pdf
43 http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/activities/egovernment/implementation/prep_action/index_en.htm
44 COM(2006) 173 final, i2010 eGovernment Action Plan: Accelerating eGovernment in Europefor the Benefit of All
Brussels, 25.04.2006 {SEC(2006) 511}
45 Articles 7 and 8 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (2000/C 364/01) and Article 8 of the
European Convention on Human Rights.
46 De Hert, Paul, and Serge Gutwirth, “Privacy, data protection and law enforcement: Opacity of the individual and
transparency of power”, in Erik Claes, Anthony Duff and Serge Gutwirth (eds.), Privacy and the criminal law, Intersentia,
Antwerpen, Oxford, 2006, p.73.
47 There appears, furthermore, to be no reason of principle why this understanding of the notion of private life should be
taken to exclude activities of a professional or business nature since it is, after all, in the course of their working lives that the
majority of people have a significant, if not the greatest, opportunity of developing relationships with the outside world. This
view is supported by the fact that, as was rightly pointed out by the Commission, it is not always possible to distinguish
clearly which of an individual's activities form part of his professional or business life and which do not. See Niemietz v.
Germany, European Court of Human Rights, 23 November 2002, § 29.2.
48 From Google News “No one can read all the news that’s published every day, so why not set up your page to show you the
stories that best represent your interests?”, quoted in Cass R. Sunstein, Republic.com 2.0, Princeton University Press,
Princeton and Oxford, 2007, p. viii.
49 Niemietz v. Germany, European Court of Human Rights, 23 November 2002, § 29.1.
50 According to gerontologists, a person should be considered frail when at least three of these factors are met:
• unintentional weight loss (five kg or more in a year),
• general feeling of exhaustion,
• weakness (as measured by grip strength),
• slow walking speed,
• low levels of physical activity.
51 Fried, Linda P., Catherine M. Tangen, Jeremy Walston et al., “Frailty in Older Adults: Evidence for a Phenotype”, Journal
of Gerontology: Medical Sciences, Vol. 56a, No. 3, March 2001, pp. 146-157.
http://biomed.gerontologyjournals.org/content/vol56/issue3/#JOURNAL_OF_GERONTOLOGY__MEDICAL_SCIENCES
52 http://cordis.europa.eu/fp7/coordination/article169_en.html
53 Fries, J.F., “Aging, natural death and the compression of morbidity”, New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 303, No. 3,
17 July 1980, pp. 130-135. http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/abstract/303/3/130
54 Vita, Anthony J., Richard B. Terry, Helen B. Hubert and James F. Fries, “Aging, Health Risks, and Cumulative
Disability”, New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 338, No. 15, 9 April 1998, pp. 1035-41.
http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/338/15/1035
55 Moody, Harry R., “Four Scenarios for an Aging Society”, The Hastings Center Report, Vol. 24, No. 5, Sept-Oct 1994, pp.
32-35. http://www.jstor.org/pss/3563497
56 Timmers, Paul “Challenges for e-Inclusion in Europe”, 2008, DG INFSO, Unit eInclusion, discussion paper
57 Foucault, Michel, “The Birth of Social Medicine”, in James D. Faubion (ed.), Essential Works of Michel Foucault 1954-1984,
Penguin, London, 2001, pp. 134-156.
58 Monahan, Torin, and Tyler Wall, “Somatic Surveillance”, Surveillance and Society, Vol. 4, No. 3, pp. 154-173.
http://www.surveillance-and-society.org/articles4(3)/somatic.pdf
59 Stevens, N., and T.V. van Tilburg, “Stimulating friendship in later life: a strategy for reducing loneliness among older
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http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/routledg/uedg/2000/00000026/00000001;jsessionid=4etb1mboasbi6.victoria
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http://psp.sagepub.com/content/vol29/issue5/
61 Rokach, Ami, “Loneliness and the life cycle”, Psychological Reports, Vol. 86, No. 2, April 2000, pp. 629-642.
http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/docdel/000020031171/2000/86/2
62 Cacioppo, John T., and Louise C. Hawkley, “Social Isolation and Health, with an Emphasis on Underlying Mechanisms”,
Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, Vol. 46, No. 3, Summer 2003, pp. S39-S52.
http://muse.uq.edu.au/journals/perspectives_in_biology_and_medicine/toc/pbm46.3x.html
63 Gibson, Hamilton B., Loneliness in later life, St. Martin’s Press, New York, NY, 2000.
64 Sakairi, K., “Research of robot-assisted activity for the elderly with senile dementia in a group home”, SICE 2004 Annual
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65 Tamura, Toshiyo, et al., “Is an Entertainment Robot Useful in the Care of Elderly People With Severe Dementia?”, Journal
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66 Badcott, David, “The basis and relevance of emotional dignity”, Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy, Vol. 6, No. 2,

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