Title: Information and Communications Technologies ICTs and Development
1Lecture 8
- Information and Communications Technologies
(ICTs) and Development
2Review of Lecture 7 Knowledge, the Environment
Sustainable Development
- What is sustainable development?
- How might an understanding of culture help us
appreciate the complex relationship between
people and the environment? - How do environments shape the lives of people who
live in them? - How do people shape the environments
in which they live? - Case studies Malaysia, Guinea
3Lecture 7 Questions to consider
- How do people read or understand the
environment? - To what extent do people shape the environment
around them, and to what extent are they shaped
by their environment(s)? - How does power and knowledge work in these
circumstances? Whose interpretations
predominate? - If the environment needs saving, whose knowledge
should be used to save it?
4Lecture 7 Key points
- Conflicts over sustainable development are not
only conflicts over resources, but conflicts over
knowledge and competing visions of development. - Environmental destruction is often blamed on
local people, but by paying attention to the
way the relationship between culture, the
environment, and development is construed has
allowed anthropologists to challenge received
wisdoms.
5Week 8 ICTs and Development
- How do ICTs relate to peoples
experiences of development? - Do ICTs have a homogenising effect on global
culture, or they adopted and used differently in
diverse social, cultural, and economic contexts? - What is the digital divide or the technology
gap and are bridging these a way to combat
poverty? - Case studies low-income mobile phone use
6Information Communications Technologies (ICTs)
- The Internet (including email, instant messaging,
Web browsing) - Digital capture, storage, and
sharing of information - Communications networks mobile, phone,
satellite, etc. - Increased bandwith
- What about older technologiesprint media,
radio, and television?
7What is the digital divide?
- Differences in access (in sustained and
affordable form) to a range of ICTs (phones,
radio, TV, Internet, mobiles, etc.) - Different levels of development of the underlying
infrastructure that enables access to and
networking of ICTs - Different levels of capacity to meaningfully use
ICTs and digital content. - (Kerry S. McNamara,
ICTs, Poverty, and
Development 200324)
8ICT-for-Development
- Seeks to bridge the digital divide by improving
poor peoples access to ICTs - Promotes to use of ICTs for poverty reduction and
sustainable development - Includes wide-ranging partnerships between NGOs,
the private sector (businesses), and national
governments to coordinate strategies for
improving access to ICTs - Most large, multilateral and bilateral
development agencies have developed extensive
programmes of ICT-for-development
9The Promise of the Mobile Phone 1
- By investing in mobile networks rather than
conventional landlines, developing nations can
skip a phase of telephony development - Mobile phones can be used in a variety of
development interventions e.g., health
promotion programmes
10The Promise of the Mobile Phone 2
- Mobile phones can be used by poor people for
local, income-generating activities - Used and unwanted mobile phones from
industrialised countries can be recycled and
re-used in developing countries
11Corporate Section Investment Areas Learners
Section Contact Us
Corporate Section gt Home Our dream is to
empower selected communities through ICT this
involves amongst other things the provision of
new and innovative technology such as multimedia
and broadband services where applicable. Through
this technology it is hoped that communities will
be able to effectively address their social,
educational, technological and economical needs.
Prelene SchmidtActing CEO Telkom Foundation
- Executive Summary
- The past year has seen the Telkom Foundation
continuing its important work in disadvantaged
communities across South Africa - making a
difference in big and small ways by providing
Information and Communication Technologies (ICT),
education, infrastructure and community projects
and support to those that need it most. - Since its establishment in 2002, these continuous
efforts towards community upliftment have made
the Telkom Foundation one of the country's
foremost corporate social investment
organisations - something that could never have
been achieved without the dedicated team who make
our social investment vision a reality. - In the past year we continued with our flagship
projects - our 12 ICT villages across South
Africa, the Beacon of Hope initiative and the
Giving from the Heart programme. We also added a
new project - the "Train-the Trainer" programme -
to ensure that IT skills are developed and remain
within the communities we serve. - As always, we continued our sponsorship of
Childline and Lifeline. In addition we held the
annual Tellkom Teacher of the year award that
recognise and reward the sterling teachers who
dedicate their time and energy to nurturing
tomorrow's leaders. You will be able to read more
about these worthy initiatives and our year's
12ICTs-for-Development 3 Assumptions
- ICTscan be used as tools of poverty reduction
and sustainable development - ICTswill be continually adapted by people in
poor and developing countries, as they find ways
of using them to combat their own poverty - ICTscan be used to create opportunities for
social and economic development amongst the
poorest
13Labour-saving devices?
- Electric iron (1903), toaster (1912), electric
vacuum cleaner (1907). - Time that housewives spent on housework did not
decline. - Why? Because of the dramatic rise in standards
of cleanliness.
14Impact of technology on housework, 1930s
- Because we housewives of today
have the tools to reach it, we dig every day
after the dust that grandmother left to spring
cataclysm. If few of us have nine children for a
weekly bath, we have two or three for a daily
immersion. If our consciences don't prick us over
vacant pie shelves or empty cookie jars, they do
over meals in which a vitamin may be omitted or a
calorie lacking. - from Ladies Home Journal, c.1930
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16Technology and social change Three points from
the Hoover example
- Technological innovations alone do not
necessarily improve wider social arrangements
(e.g. patterns of domestic labour allocation). - What eventually changed the amount of time women
devoted to their housekeeping was economic
transformation, changing gender roles, and new
domestic arrangements, such as - - Men doing more housework,
- - Women working outside the home, and
- - Hiring other women (cleaners) to do housework.
17Cultural Appropriation of TechnologyThe Kayapo
(Brazil)
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19On the Kayapo
- The technical objectification of their
own culture
through use of Western
video technology has become an
important means by which the Kayapo
are constructing this traditional
culture and ethnic
identity. In addition
to the uses of video
self-documentation
for education and as a repository
of cultural knowledge against losses from death
or acculturation, many Kayapo see video as a
means of reaching out to non-Kayapo, presenting
their culture and way of life in a form that
others can understand, respect and support. They
see this as an essential part of their struggle
to sustain and defend their society and
environment. - (Terrence Turner)
20Lessons from the Kayapo
- When indigenous groups use adopt and use
technological innovations, it does not meant that
they have lost their culture ICTs may be used
to protect culture or advocate self-determination.
- Instead, we have to look at the multiple uses of
different technologies, and ask - For what purpose is technology being used?
- By whom?
- Who is allowed and not allowed to participate?
Who decides? - What are the outcomes/effects of technology use,
and how do these differ for different categories
of actors (men, women, young, old, etc.)
21Readings for Week 8
- Hahn, Hans Peter and Ludovic Kibora. (2008) The
Domestication of the Mobile Phone Oral Society
and New ICT in Burkina Faso. The Journal of
Modern African Studies 46(1)87-109. - Horst, Heather and Daniel Miller. (2005) From
Kinship to Link-up Cell Phones and Social
Networking in Jamaica. Current Anthropology
46(5)755-78.
22Questions for this weeks readings
- How, and for what purpose do poor people (in
Jamaica and Burkina Faso) use mobile phones? - Is there a conflict between economic and social
goals in using the mobile phones? - How are mobile phones used to deepen or extend
social networks and what role might these
networks play in times of economic vulnerability? - Can the distribution and use of mobile phones
reduce poverty in low-income countries? Why or
why not?
23Critiques of ICT-for-Development?
- The poor dont need ICTs. Development should
focus on basic needs. - The symptom (the digital divide) is mistaken for
the cause (poverty). - Public-private partnerships enrich large telecom
companies who promote themselves as agents of
sustainable development. - Too much focus on new technologies!
24Conclusions
- The case of ICTs in development
opens broader questions about the
relationship between technology, culture, and
development as progress. - New technologies often have unintended effects
(e.g., Hoover, or mobile phone use). - People use technologies in all sorts of ways,
reflecting their diverse interests, concerns, and
cultures. - When people embrace and use technology, it does
not mean that they relinquish their culture
(e.g., Kayapo, or mobile phone use in Jamaica).