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Dorothea Kleine at the UNESCO Chair/Centre in ICT4D Royal Holloway University of London

www.ict4dc.org. Technologies of Choice? ICTs, development and the capabilities approach. Dorothea Kleine at the UNESCO Chair/Centre in ICT4D Royal Holloway University of London. Masters in Practising Sustainable Development (ICT4D specialism) at Royal Holloway, University of London

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Dorothea Kleine at the UNESCO Chair/Centre in ICT4D Royal Holloway University of London

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  1. www.ict4dc.org Technologies of Choice? ICTs, development and the capabilities approach Dorothea Kleineat the UNESCO Chair/Centre in ICT4D Royal HollowayUniversity of London Masters in Practising Sustainable Development (ICT4D specialism) at Royal Holloway, University of London www.rhul.ac.uk/msc_psd

  2. Technology is not neutral • „technology is society“ (Castells 1996:5) mindsets and political agendas can be embedded in technology • Norms and values are written into code (Lessig 1999) • People‘s access to the Internet is mediated by framing institutions with specific norms and expectations (Wajcman 2004)

  3. ICT4 …. What kind of development?

  4. Means vs. ends Economic resources … yet currently the dominant measure of development is economic growth

  5. The need for a different approach to development: EconocentricHolistic Linear Systemic Top-down dialogue with citizen-users Supply-led Choice-led

  6. The capabilities approach: development as freedom Development can be seen as “a process of expanding the real freedoms that people enjoy” (AmartyaSen1999:3) Focusing on the “substantive freedom – of people to lead the lives they have reason to value and to enhance the real choices they have.” (Sen1999:293) • Capabilities: things people have reason to value doing or being • CA is key alternative to growth-focused development approaches

  7. Operationalising the Capabilities Approach

  8. the journey so far: steps towards CA operationalisation for the field of ICT4D(Garnham 1997, Mansell 2002, Madon 2003, Gigler 2004, Alampay 2006, Smith 2006, Johnstone 2007, Kleine 2007, Zheng 2007, Zheng & Walsham 2008; Oosterlaken2009; Fernandez-Baldor, Hueso & Boni 2009; Spence & Smith 2010; Buskens 2010; Grunfeld 2011; Toboso 2011; Vaughan 2011; Zheng & Stahl 2011; Birdsall 2011; Coeckelbergh 2011; Seth et al. 2011; Srinivasan & Gagliardone 2011; Oosterlaken, Grimshaw & Janssen 2011 …)Forthcoming: SammiaPoveda on Sen, Freire & digital inclusion in BrazilTony Roberts on capabilities, critical agency & participatory video in Zambia

  9. The Choice Framework STRUCTURE • institutions and organisations • discourses • policies and programmes • formal and informal laws • including: • - Norms on usage of space • - Norms on usage of time • technologies and innovations • including: access to ICTs • - availability of ICTs • - affordability of ICTs • - skills needed for ICTs DEVELOPMENT OUTCOMES • Primary: Choice • Secondary, as chosen • by individual, e.g.: • easier communication • increased knowledge • better/more social relationships • healthy environment • increased income • increased mobility • more voice • more autonomy • etc. • DEGREES OF EMPOWERMENT • existence of choice • sense of choice • use of choice • achievement of • choice CAPABILITIES ACHIEVED FUNCTIONINGS AGENCY SR He CR Age Gender Ethnicity etc. NR ER PsR MR (Kleine 2007, 2011, based on Alsop & Heinsohn 2005, DFID 1999) Key: ER = Educational Resources SR = Social Resources PsR = Psychological Resources NR = Natural Resources In = Information MR = Material Resources FR = Financial Resources GR = Geographical Resources CR = Cultural Resources He = Health Ti = Time GR In Ti FR

  10. Ways of applying the Choice Framework a) Systemic mapping of development processes b) Designing and planning for choice

  11. ICT policies in Chile

  12. Chile • continued economic growth • low levels of corruption • High literacy level • Good IT infrastructure Potential for ICT-assisted development • High level of social inequality • High level of regional inequality Risk of digital divides along existing divides

  13. Regulatory Framework • Network of Infocentros • E-government (e.g. E-procurement, Chilecompra) • IT/digital literacy training • Supporting use of digital technologies in enterprises • Promoting digital innovation • Adapt judicial norms • Efficient funding for digital development Chile’s Agenda Digital

  14. Deputy Director of the Chilecompra e-procurement system, Santiago de Chile, August 2005: The important thing is that people are proactive and are interested in doing better than others. We have to create the conditions and the tools in which they can do that […] This all has to do with the economic model in which Chile is developing itself. Yes, in the end this is a neoliberal market economy in which the lances all point in one direction so that the most efficient will win. [...]

  15. I believe that essentially one has to invest much in education in the regions as well. Especially the rural sphere – how to include it in the wagon of productivity, in the engine of development. But at the same time this is difficult because there are also, obviously, the values of those communities - values that can be from another planet, even other spiritual beliefs! Deputy Director of the Chilecompra e-procurement system, Santiago de Chile, August 2005

  16. Red Communitaria/ Telecenters (Infocentros) • Goals: SOCIAL INCLUSION and EQUAL OPPORTUNITY • Public computer and internet access points across the country • Free access • Small fee for printing etc. • Free IT-courses run by the digital literacy campaign

  17. access Availability, affordability, skills (Gerster & Zimmermann 2003) also: (gendered) norms on the use of space also: (gendered) norms on the use of time

  18. Gendered norms on the use of time In the beginning it was difficult [with the women] because the men come home in the evening and when things [at the IT training courses] take a bit more time, the men come home and the food is not ready. So [...] we told the women: you go do all the housework first and leave it ready and then you come here. (infocentro director, ID 20, F1)

  19. Meeting people: Marta Castillo

  20. Marta Castillo, microentrepreneur • single mother, head of household (3 children, 1 grandmother) • low income • basic education • used to be a „nana“ (cook/maid) in Santiago, excellent cooking skills • Took free IT-course at the Infocentro • Uses the Internet in the Infocentro to research recipes to diversify her production (diabetics etc.) • hopes to organize women so they can provide jam etc. for local schools and hospitals

  21. Marta Castillo’s media usage (Kleine 2007)

  22. Marta Castillo, microentrepreneur • As of March 2005, Marta had never used the public e-procurement system Chilecompra • Meanwhile (March 2005), the local hospital in Algún started using Chilecompra and regularly sourcing 24 jars of jam from a large distributor in Santiago (together with other food supplies) who offered the lowest prices. This brought costs down.

  23. The Choice Framework STRUCTURE • institutions and organisations • discourses • policies and programmes • formal and informal laws • including: • - Norms on usage of space • - Norms on usage of time • technologies and innovations • including: access to ICTs • - availability of ICTs • - affordability of ICTs • - skills needed for ICTs DEVELOPMENT OUTCOMES • Primary: Choice • Secondary, as chosen • by individual, e.g.: • easier communication • increased knowledge • better/more social relationships • healthy environment • increased income • increased mobility • more voice • more autonomy • etc. • DEGREES OF EMPOWERMENT • existence of choice • sense of choice • use of choice • achievement of • choice CAPABILITIES ACHIEVED FUNCTIONINGS AGENCY SR He CR Age Gender Ethnicity etc. NR ER PsR MR (Kleine 2007, 2011, based on Alsop & Heinsohn 2005, DFID 1999) Key: ER = Educational Resources SR = Social Resources PsR = Psychological Resources NR = Natural Resources In = Information MR = Material Resources FR = Financial Resources GR = Geographical Resources CR = Cultural Resources He = Health Ti = Time GR In Ti FR

  24. STRUCTURE • institutions and organisations • discourses • policies and programmes • formal and informal laws • including: • - Norms on usage of space • - Norms on usage of time • technologies and innovations • including: access to ICTs • - availability of ICTs • - affordability of ICTs • - skills needed for ICTs DEVELOPMENT OUTCOMES • Primary: Choice • Secondary, as chosen • by individual, e.g.: • easier communication • increased knowledge • better/more social relationships • healthy environment • increased income • increased mobility • more voice • more autonomy • etc. • DEGREES OF EMPOWERMENT • existence of choice • sense of choice • use of choice • achievement of • choice CAPABILITIES ACHIEVED FUNCTIONINGS AGENCY SR He CR Age Gender Ethnicity etc. NR ER Key: ER = Educational Resources SR = Social Resources PsR = Psychological Resources NR = Natural Resources In = Information MR = Material Resources FR = Financial Resources GR = Geographical Resources CR = Cultural Resources He = Health Ti = Time PsR MR GR In Ti FR ecological limits

  25. Conclusion

  26. Conclusions • think development not as growth, but as freedom of people to live the lives they have reason to value • Individuals and communities may have very different values => radical pluralism of the capabilities approach • using the Choice Framework as a living tool – see what works for you

  27. Conclusions II: • Recognising multiple resources of income-poor people, respecting their agency • never underestimating the agency of people in development, but also recognising that structures are powerful and need to be adjusted to support people’s agency • Seeking out mechanisms to allow people to express choice e.g. Open and malleable technology participatory design of technology recognising and negotiating ecological limits and social challenges voucher schemes participatory budgets/procurement

  28. Thinking development beyond the Growth Paradigm Planning and designing for choice

  29. Thank you! Comments & feedback welcome: dorothea.kleine@rhul.ac.uk @dorotheakleine Masters in Practising Sustainable Development (ICT4D specialism) at Royal Holloway, University of London www.rhul.ac.uk/msc_psd www.ict4dc.org Reviews: “landmark volume” “intellectually exciting, ethnographically rich, compelling, compassionate” “a most welcome new approach to ICT4D studies”

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