October 1st, 2008
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(Cross-posted on my fellowship blog - How International Values Shape Communications Technologies)
Slide 1: The ideas in this presentation will form the core of my first fellowship paper. So, if you understand micro-finance, or ICT4D, better than I do, do share your feedback with me. I’ll be grateful.
Slide 2: I see the development process as an hourglass. At the top of the ‘development hourglass’ are the more privileged societies and the challenge here is to build engagement in the development process. At the bottom of the ‘development hourglass’ are the less privileged societies and the challenge here is to enable access to the development process. The challenge in the middle of the ‘development hourglass’ is to connect the top with the bottom via an institutional infrastructure and enable flow, a role that has been traditionally performed by development aid agencies.
Slide 3: Technology can be a vital enabler in the technology hourglass. Web 2.0 and mobile 2.0 tools can help create engagement in the more privileged societies. Community telecenters and mobile phones can help enable access in the less privileged societies. Enterprise ICT and enterprise 2.0 solutions can help the institutions in the middle connect the top to the bottom in a more effective and efficient manner.
October 1st, 2008 |
Posted in Flat or Not, Social Change 2.0
| Tagged with Adoption, Bank Andara, CGAP, Change-blogging, Community Telecenter, Development Hourglass, Disruption, Enterprise 2.0, GSMA, ICT, ICT4D, Innovation, Kiva, Mercy Corps, Meta-MFI, MFI, Micro Finance Institution, Micro Philanthropy, Micro-finance, Mifos, Mobile Money Transfers, Mobile Payments, Mobile-2.0, SM4SC, Unitus, Web-2.0 |
September 9th, 2008
(Cross-posted at my official fellowship blog — How Global Values Shape Communications Technologies)
Kentaro Toyama, who leads the Technology for Emerging Markets research group at Microsoft Research India, writes a precise introduction to ICT for development as a guest editor for IEEE’s Computer June 2008 edition (via James Utzschneider) –
On a planet with 1.2 billion Internet users, a far less fortunate 1.2 billion people survive on less than a dollar a day. The same technology that has transformed our lives—the lives of the wealthiest people on the planet—remains out of reach and irrelevant for the poorest.
Often dubbed “information and communication technologies for development” and abbreviated ICTD or ICT4D, this field involves multiple sectors—governments, academia, small start-ups, large corporations, intergovernmental organizations, nonprofits, and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs)—and draws interest from multiple disciplines: anthropology, sociology, economics, political science, design, engineering, and computer science to name a few.
September 9th, 2008 |
Posted in Announcements, Social Change 2.0
| Tagged with Conference, ICT, ICT4D, ICTD 2009, Kentaro Toyama, Microsoft Research India, Paper, Social Change, Technology for Emerging Markets |
September 9th, 2008
(Cross-posted on my official fellowship blog — How Global Values Shape Communications Technologies)
I believe that the most powerful application of social media is to help citizens self-organize themselves into virtual communities to work towards social change. In BRIC countries, where mobile penetration is much higher than PC penetration, such communities will need to be designed in an “access agnostic” manner, which means that the content/ community exists in the “cloud” and can be accessed by multiple mediums including websites, RSS feeds, voice portals and even text messages.
So, when I attend Microsoft’s ICT for Development Conference (see agenda) in Washington DC on September 22-23 2008, I’ll be interested to find out if development agency leaders, private sector practitioners, non-profits and activists share my enthusiasm for the use of social media for social change. The conference is free, but there are limited seats, so you need to register in advance at DevEx, a community for “professionals working in international development, global health, and foreign assistance”.
Incidentally, Microsoft runs some interesting initiatives under its Unlimited Potential program and James Utzschneider runs a cool blog on “Microsoft’s commitment to create sustained social and economic opportunity for the next 5 billion”.
September 9th, 2008 |
Posted in Announcements, Mobile, Social Change 2.0, Social Media
| Tagged with Conference, Development, DevEx, ICT, ICT4D, ICT4D 2008, James Utzschneider, Microsoft, Mobile, Social Change, Social Media, Unlimited Potential |