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Understanding the connections between ICTs and poverty
id21.org
August 21, 2006
http://www.id21.org/rural/r3as1g2.html
There has been
little research into the actual and potential uses of information
and communication technologies (ICTs) in poor communities. Discussions
of the digital divide, information inequality and poverty need to
be based on better understanding of the social, cultural and political
dynamics that constrain or facilitate ICT interventions.
A report from
the Information Society Research Group – a consortium of University
College London, Queensland University of Technology, The London
School of Economics and The University of Adelaide – presents findings
from research in India, Ghana, South Africa and Jamaica. In each
community researchers looked at not only new mobile and digital
media, but also radio, television, video, print and visual media
and how they are utilised in specific poverty contexts.
Mobile phone
uptake is rapid, even in very poor communities. Cell phones are
welcomed as a tool to support kinship, social and business networks.
In India, Ghana and South Africa lack of network coverage in rural
areas – rather than poverty – is the major impediment to adoption.
Mobile phones have assisted micro-enterprise growth and job creation.
By contrast, internet adoption is notably lacking in both practical
uses and enterprise opportunities even in Ghana, the one country
where it has been extensively adopted in urban areas.
In South Africa
civil society struggles for rights are supported by a sophisticated
use of socially mediated electronic communications. Ghana, by contrast,
shows low levels of ICT use by community organisations. Indian civil
society would be more effective with greater integration of electronic
media, improved circulation of information and better coordination.
Deregulation
and support to small enterprise services has opened up a whole range
of income-earning possibilities and extended the reach of cellular
phones to even remote areas. Private and commercially operated cell
phones or public call offices have enabled poor and remote communities
to be included in regional, national and international economic
flows, particularly remittances.
A bias towards
male ownership and access to technologies such as mobile phones
exists but is not as significant as many fear. Significant use of
ICTs by young women has potential to transform women’s opportunities
and help change attitudes.
The authors
note:
- an absence
of linkages between ICTs and formal education
- a marked
lack of creative and coherent ICT educational policy appropriate
to poor communities
- lack of knowledge
as to how ICTs and ICT skills might be connected to employment
and livelihood strategies
- the potential
of community radio to spread information in rural India is held
back by licensing regulations.
It is important
for governments, donors and NGOs working to promote ICTs to:
- develop policies
that connect with and build upon the fact that people are generally
informed by existing forms of communication such as phones and
radio
- identify
ICT opportunities and constraints in terms of the overall local
structure of communications
- investigate
how newer media can be connected with older ones and planted in
local social networks
- integrate
informational objectives into the use of ICTs for social networking
- explore potential
for using mobile phones and personal digital assistants (PDAs)
to spread health information.
Source(s):
‘Final report: Information society: emergent technologies and development
communities in the South’, Information Society Research Group, by
Daniel Miller, Andrew Skuse, Don Slater, Jo Tacchi, Tripta Chandola,
Thomas Cousins, Heather Horst and Janet Kwami, 2005 Full
document.
‘Managing Distance: the Social Dynamics of Rural Telecommunications
Access and Use in the Eastern Cape, South’ Africa Information Society
Research Group Working Paper No. 1, by Andrew Skuse and Thomas Cousins,
February 2005 Full
document.
‘Finding a Voice: The Potential of Creative ICT Literacy and Voice
in Community Multimedia Centres in South Asia’ Information Society
Research Group Working Paper No. 3, Jo Tacchi, May 2005 Full
document.
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