107 research outputs found
A CRITICAL PERSPECTIVE ON QUANTIFICATION OF DEVELOPMENT IN ICT4D
Many donor-funded ICT4D interventions are implemented to quantitatively measure, monitor, and evaluate results of development projects and programs in the global South. We focus on how quantification processes aren’t neutral and in the temptation of evidence-based efficiency, can potentially form new inequalities. Current studies within this field overlook the role of ICTs in the quantification process and how IT-enabled quantification systems potentially contribute in bringing institutional change with ethical and social implications for development. In this paper, using institutional logics, affordances, and the concept of IS artifact, we take a first step towards theorizing this problematic side of ICT4D and quantification. We further outline our plan to empirically illustrate this framework through an ongoing interpretive case study in Nepal. The case study explores a donor-funded public sector ICT4D intervention, implemented for assisting local governments to self-evaluate their institutional capacity through ICT-enabled quantification system. Finally, we contribute to the IS literature by providing a critical theoretical lens to scrutinize ICT4D interventions
Digital Social Enterprise for Sustainable Development: Insights from the Case Study in Nepal
It is generally agreed that digital social enterprises (DSE) through the digitalization process can contribute to sustainable development. However, there are a few theoretical and empirical studies in this research stream. To address this knowledge gap, we conducted a qualitative interpretive case study in Nepal. Applying the theory of affordances as an analytical tool, we identified five digital affordances: transactability, communicability, accessibility, manageability, and digitizability. By actualizing these affordances, DSEs can contribute to access to market and finance, social engagement, waste management, and digitized information. We also identified various challenges such as lack of awareness about digital affordances and capabilities to actualize those affordances, lack of digital culture, and poor mapping system that can inhibit the actualization of the affordances and showed the facilitating conditions that can address these challenges. Finally, we suggest future research avenues.publishedVersio
Digital Social Enterprise for Sustainable Development: Insights from the Case Study in Nepal
It is generally agreed that digital social enterprises (DSE) through the digitalization process can contribute to sustainable development. However, there are a few theoretical and empirical studies in this research stream. To address this knowledge gap, we conducted a qualitative interpretive case study in Nepal. Applying the theory of affordances as an analytical tool, we identified five digital affordances: transactability, communicability, accessibility, manageability, and digitizability. By actualizing these affordances, DSEs can contribute to access to market and finance, social engagement, waste management, and digitized information. We also identified various challenges such as lack of awareness about digital affordances and capabilities to actualize those affordances, lack of digital culture, and poor mapping system that can inhibit the actualization of the affordances and showed the facilitating conditions that can address these challenges. Finally, we suggest future research avenues.publishedVersio
Understanding ICT in ICT4D: An Affordance Perspective
Understanding the role of ICT for development is at the core of ICT4D research. However, prevailing research in this field most often focuses on access or readiness of a technology, or on the outcomes of the technology use. Less attention has been paid to understand the mechanism of the technology use that leads to the outcomes. The question of why ICT in a development context sometimes work and sometimes does not work still remains a subject of enquiry. To enhance our understanding in this regard, we propose to use the concept of affordances to unfold the “black boxed” nature of ICT. We revisited a case from Kenya to illustrate the application of affordances in a ICT4D context. The findings show that the benefits of ICT can be harnessed only if the users in the underprivileged communities can perceive and actualize the affordances of the ICT. However, what is ICT affordances, and how people perceive and actualize the affordances in the context of developing countries are the issues that we delve in this paper
Equipment-as-Experience: A Heidegger-Based Position of Information Security
Information security (InfoSec) has ontologically been characterised as an order machine. The order machine connects with other machines through interrupting mechanisms. This way of portraying InfoSec focuses on the correct placement of machine entities to protect information assets. However, what is missing in this view is that for the InfoSec we experience in everyday practice, we are not just observers of the InfoSec phenomena but also active agents of it. To contribute to the quest, we draw on Heidegger’s (1962) notion of equipment and propose the concept of equipment-as-experience to understand the ontological position of InfoSec in everyday practice. In this paper we show how equipment-as-experience provides a richer picture of InfoSec as being a fundamental sociotechnical phenomena. We further contend using an example case to illustrate that InfoSec equipment should not be understood merely by its properties (present-at-hand mode), but rather in ready-to-hand mode when put into practice
Exploring the link between ICT intervention and human development through a social capital lens : The case study of a wireless project in the mountain region of Nepal
While it is generally accepted that information and
communication technology (ICT) can lead to development, the
process through which this may happen remains unclear. At the
core of this debate is the very definition of the term
‘development’. In this thesis, I adopted Amartya Sen’s definition.
According to Sen (1999), human development is built upon a
particular capability approach. He inferred that human
development is the enhancement of human capabilities (freedom
of choice) in order that people can live a life which they value
and have reasons to value. The capability approach has, however,
been criticized for its individualistic stance. In responding to this
criticism, this thesis integrated the societal level by adding
collective capabilities to conceptualize development. Such
capabilities, which are not simple aggregates of individual
capabilities, are built on collective action that can be fostered
through social capital. Social capital is characterized as shared
norms or values that promote social cooperation within and
between communities. It can be further categorized into three
forms: bonding, bridging, and linking social capital. Bonding
refers to networks between homogeneous groups of people,
bridging refers to networks between socially heterogeneous
groups, and linking refers to vertical ties between different
hierarchies of power and social status
ICT, SOCIAL CAPITAL AND DEVELOPMENT: THE CASE OF A MOUNTAIN REGION IN NEPAL
While the role of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) in fostering socioeconomic development is generally accepted, the process through which this may happen remain unclear. In this paper, we take a social capital perspective and propose that ICT helps to create or strengthen social capital of communities which in turn leads to development. To illustrate our proposition, we conducted a qualitative case study in the Myagdi district in the mountain region of Nepal. We studied the Nepal Wireless Networking Project (NWNP) and examined its role in building social capital, and the consequences of extended social capital on socio-economic development process. Our findings indicate that the project is enabling the villagers to create, maintain, and extend their bonding, bridging, and linking social capital. Subsequently, this social capital assists them in developing and improving their education, healthcare, communication, and generating economic activities. We also identified several challenges such as, over dependency on single actor, high illiteracy rate, poor physical infrastructure, language, and lack of participation that may impede the social capital building process
Framework for Positioning Empirical Research in ICT4D
This paper introduces a framework with four quadrants that illustrates the connections between ICT, transformative processes, and developmental outcomes in the ICT4D context. The framework helps researchers identify key areas for analysis and emphasizes both individual and collective aspects of ICT\u27s impact on developmental processes
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