Web Accessibility in Africa: A Study of Three African Domains - Human-Computer Interaction – INTERACT 2013
Conference Papers Year : 2013

Web Accessibility in Africa: A Study of Three African Domains

Daniel Costa
  • Function : Author
  • PersonId : 1004909
Nádia Fernandes
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  • PersonId : 1004910
Sofia Neves
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  • PersonId : 1004911
Carlos Duarte
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  • PersonId : 1004912
Luís Carriço
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  • PersonId : 1004914

Abstract

Being the most used method for dissemination of information, especially for public services, it is of paramount importance that the Web is made accessible as to allow all its users to access the content of its pages.In this paper, we evaluated 2250 Governmental Web pages from each one of three different African countries (i.e., Angola, Mozambique and South Africa). This report compares the accessibility quality and the level of structural complexity of these African countries government’s Web pages. We found that hand coded pages tend to have larger number of HTML elements and also to present higher number of accessibility problems. Finally, it suggests some recommendations to repair the most common problems in these pages.
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hal-01497445 , version 1 (28-03-2017)

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Daniel Costa, Nádia Fernandes, Sofia Neves, Carlos Duarte, Raquel Hijón-Neira, et al.. Web Accessibility in Africa: A Study of Three African Domains. 14th International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction (INTERACT), Sep 2013, Cape Town, South Africa. pp.331-338, ⟨10.1007/978-3-642-40483-2_23⟩. ⟨hal-01497445⟩
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