ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳

UK

In brief

The UK was not involved in EU Kids Online 2020. Main results on this page draw on the 2010 survey, with more recent publications under “Publications.”

Children in the UK have had internet access at both school and home for a relatively long time, so that internet use is thoroughly embedded in all aspects of their lives. They spend longer online than the European average. But British parents tend to manage their children’s online safety by taking a restrictive approach. This protects children from many of the risks but also limits the development of their online levels of skills and opportunities.

UK

Highlights

  • The UK findings have informed the policy development, guidance and initiatives of the , now , which coordinates national activities across this multi-stakeholder domain.
  • Sonia Livingstone works with the  Evidence Group to disseminate the latest findings via the .
  • The UKCIS Evidence Group recently reviewed all available research, drawing substantially on EU Kids Online findings, for the UK Government, to inform its White Paper on Online harms. See our reviews of research , and .
  • The main UK findings for EU Kids Online are available , and the qualitative findings are .
  • See also our of the Journal of Children and Media (2013) on “Children, internet and risk in comparative perspective.”

Reports and resources

Publications

Livingstone, S., Mascheroni, G., and Staksrud, E. (2018) European research on children’s internet use: Assessing the past, anticipating the future. New Media & Society, 2018, Vol. 20(3) 1103–1122 . [ and ]

Livingstone, S. (2018) La vida online de la infancia. In Jimenez, E., Garmendia, M., and Casado, M. A. (Eds.) Entre selfies y whatsapps: Oportunidades y riesgos para la infancia y la adolescencia conectada (pp.13-29). Barcelona: Gesida.

Livingstone, S. (2017) Children and young people’s lives online. In J. Brown (eds.) Online Risk to Children: Impact, Protection and Prevention (pp.23-36). Wiley: New Jersey.

Haddon, L. and Livingstone, S. (2017) Risks, opportunities and risky opportunities: How children make sense of the online environment. In Brooks, P., and Blumberg, F. (Eds.) Cognitive Development in Digital Contexts (275-302). San Diego, Cal.: Elsevier.

Livingstone, S., and Third, A. (2017) Guest editor for special issue, ‘Children and young people’s rights in the digital age’. New Media & Society, 19(5). []

Livingstone, S., Haddon, L., Görzig, A., and Ólafsson, K. (2014) EU Kids Online II: A large-scale quantitative approach to the study of European children's internet use and online risks and safety. SAGE Research Methods Cases. London: Sage. []

Haddon, L., and Livingstone, S. (2014) The relationship between offline and online risks. Young people, media and health: risks and rights: Nordicom Clearinghouse Yearbook 2014 (pp.21-32). Eds. C. von Feilitzen and J. Stenersen. Goteborg: Nordicom. []

Livingstone, S., and Smith, P. (2014) Annual research review: children and young people in the digital age: The nature and prevalence of risks, harmful effects, and risk and protective factors, for mobile and internet usage. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry: Annual Research Review 2014, 55(6): 635-654. doi: 10.1111/jcpp.12197 []

Livingstone, S., Kirwil, L., Ponte, C., and Staksrud, E. (2014) In their own words: what bothers children online? European Journal of Communication. 29(3): 271-288. doi: 10.1177/0267323114521045 []

Livingstone, S. (2014) Developing social media literacy: How children learn to interpret risky opportunities on social network sites. Communications. The European Journal of Communication Research, 39(3): 283–303. []

Livingstone, S., and O’Neill, B. (2014) Children’s rights online: challenges, dilemmas and emerging directions. In van der Hof, S., van den Berg, B., and Schermer, B. (eds), Minding Minors Wandering the Web: Regulating Online Child Safety (pp.19-38). Berlin: Springer. []

Livingstone, S. (2014) Online risk harm, risk and vulnerability: Updated UK risk data, The Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health Annual Conference, London, March 2014. (Full text]

Livingstone, S., and Bulger, M. (2013) A Global Agenda for Children’s Rights in the Digital Age: Recommendations for Developing UNICEF's Research Strategy. Florence: UNICEF Office of Research. []

Bulger, M., and Livingstone, S. (2013) Media literacy research and policy in Europe: A review of recent, current and planned activities. Report of a seminar organised by the COST Transforming Audiences, Transforming Societies Action, Brussels, September 2013. [Full text]

Staksrud, E., Ólafsson, K., and Livingstone, S. (2013) Does the use of social networking sites increase children’s risk of harm? Computers in Human Behavior, 29(1): 40-50. []

Livingstone, S., Ólafsson, K., and Staksrud, E. (2013) Risky social networking practices among ‘underage’ users: Lessons for evidence-based policy. Journal for Computer-Mediated Communication. 18(3): 303-320. []

Livingstone, S. (2013) Online risk, harm and vulnerability: Reflections on the evidence base for child internet safety policy. ZER: Journal of Communication Studies, 18: 13-28. []

Ito, M., Gutiérrez, K., Livingstone, S., Penuel, B., Rhodes, J., Salen, K., Schor, J., Sefton-Green, J., and Watkins, C. (2013). Connected learning: an agenda for research and design. Irvine, CA: Digital Media and Learning Research Hub. []

Livingstone, S., and Wang, Y. (2013) Media Literacy and the Communications Act: What has been achieved and what should be done? A 2013 update. ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Media Policy Project Brief 2. London: ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳. []

Livingstone, S. (2012) Critical reflections on the prospects for ICT in education. Oxford Review of Education, 38 (1): 9-24. [] 

Livingstone, S., Papaioannou, T., Mar Grandío Pérez, M., and Wijnen, C. (2012) Critical insights in European media literacy research and policy, Media Studies, 3(6): 1-13. []

Livingstone, S. (2012) Challenges of comparative research: Cross-national and transnational approaches to the globalising media landscape. In Esser, F. & Hanitzsch, T. (Eds.), Handbook of Comparative Communication Research (pp.415-429). New York: Routledge. [] 

Livingstone, S., and Haddon, L. (2012) Theoretical framework for children’s internet use. In Livingstone, S., Haddon, L., and Görzig, A. (Eds.) Children, Risk and Safety on the Internet: Research and policy challenges in comparative perspective (pp.1-14). Bristol: The Policy Press. []

Livingstone, S., Hasebrink, U., and Görzig, A. (2012) A general model of determinants of risk and safety. In Livingstone, S., Haddon, L., and Görzig, A. (Eds.) Children, Risk and Safety on the Internet: Research and policy challenges in comparative perspective (pp.323-337). Bristol: The Policy Press. []

Livingstone, S., Davidson, J., Bryce, J., Millwood Hargrave, A., and Grove-Hills, J. (2012) Children’s online activities, risks and safety: The UK evidence base. London: UK Council for Child Internet Safety. []

Livingstone, S., Palmer, T., with others (2012) Identifying vulnerable children online and what strategies can help them. Report of the seminar arranged by the UKCCIS Evidence Group, March. []

Ringrose, J., Gill, R., Livingstone, S., and Harvey, L. (2012) A qualitative study of children, young people and ‘sexting’: A report prepared for the NSPCC. [] 

Carr, J., Walden, I., and Livingstone, S. (2012) The legal basis of children’s and young people’s engagement with the internet. Seminar report. A workshop held for UK legal and child protection experts, October 2012. []

Livingstone, S. (2011). Positioning children’s interests within debates over internet governance. In von Feilitzen, C., Carlsson, U., and Bucht, C. (eds.) New questions, new insights, new approaches: contributions to the research forum at the World Summit on Media for Children and Youth 2010 (161-173). Goteborg: Nordicom. []

Team

Sonia Livingstone

Sonia LivingstoneProfessor in the Department of Media and Communications at the ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳, is author/editor of 20 books and many academic articles on media audiences, children and the internet, media regulation, domestic contexts of media use and media literacy.

LeslieHaddon2014

Dr Leslie Haddon is a senior researcher in the Department of Media and Communications at the ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳. Over the last 20 years he has worked chiefly on the social shaping and consumption of information and communication technologies. His expertise includes digital divides, mobile phones, internet use, cross-national research, teenagers.

Contact

Professor Sonia Livingstone
Department of Media and Communications
London School of Economics and Political Science
Houghton Street
London WC2A 2AE
UK
email: s.livingstone@lse.ac.uk