From: Global Washington [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, July 14, 2011 4:50 PM
To: Chris Coward
Subject: The Dark Side of ICT - 3rd in a series of lectures on technology and 
communications in development

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The Dark Side of ICT

Global Washington presents the third in a series of lectures and panels on 
information and communication technology and global development

Session 3: The Dark Side of ICT

Speakers:
Emily Bancroft (VillageReach)
David Lubinski (PATH)
Kentaro Toyama (University of California, Berkeley)

Information and communication technologies hold out the tantalizing potential 
to catalyze international development. The Internet can connect remote 
smallholder farmers with agricultural experts. The mobile phone can increase 
incomes of low-income fishermen. The personal computer can streamline data 
collection in rural healthcare. But, "can" is seldom "does." While the 
potential for positive impact through information technologies is significant, 
this potential is rarely realized in practice. What's worse, there are cases 
when the technology causes more harm than good.

In this panel discussion, the speakers will draw on existing research and 
personal experience to highlight the dark side of ICT in global development. 
They will present examples of well-intentioned ICT gone badly, discuss the 
mechanisms of negative impact, and share thoughts on how negative impacts can 
be minimized.

Space is limited! 
Register<http://tracking.etapestry.com/t/19764616/612681688/54458928/0/> today!

When: Tuesday, August 9th, 2011
4:00pm - 5:30pm
Where:  Global Washington Office
500 Union St., Suite 801
Seattle, WA 98101
Price: FREE for Global Washington members (members, contact admin at 
globalwa.org<mailto:admin at globalwa.org> for a discount code)
$15 for non-members
Register:  Global Washington 
website<http://tracking.etapestry.com/t/19764616/612681688/54458928/0/>



________________________________




Speaker Bios

Emily Bancroft is a Program Manager and the Health Systems Group Lead at 
VillageReach. She is responsible for the design, development and management of 
health system intervention programs at VillageReach, a global health 
organization focused on improving health sector infrastructure at the ?last 
mile? in low-income countries. Improving access to data from last mile 
communities is a key component of VillageReach?s work, and Emily acts as an 
interface between the Health Systems and Information Systems groups within the 
organization. Emily has worked with health workers and program staff in rural 
health facilities across a number of countries in Eastern and Southern Africa 
and has direct experience with how the use of information technology at the 
facility and community level can both support and harm efforts to improve data 
quality and health system performance. Prior to joining VillageReach, Emily 
worked with I-TECH, Physicians for Huma! n Rights, and NPower. Emily has an MPH 
from the University of Washington?s School of Public Health and Community 
Medicine and a BA from Princeton University.

David Lubinski leads the global health management information systems (HMIS) 
program at PATH in Seattle, Washington. The HMIS program seeks to unlock the 
full potential of information and communication technology to improve 
population health and strengthen health systems in the world?s poorest 
countries. Current partners include leaders in telecommunications, device 
manufacturing, computing platforms, software development, and system 
integration. Representative HMIS projects include: (1) the redesign of 
logistics management information systems in Zambia, Senegal, Vietnam, and 
Rwanda, (2) a mobile device platform for community health workers in Zambia, 
India and Tanzania, and (3) the development of common requirements and 
standards for national health insurance information systems in Thailand, India, 
Ghana, Indonesia, Vietnam, and the Philippines. Prior to his work at PATH, Mr. 
Lubinski was chief technical officer for the World Health Organization&! 
rsquo;s Health Metrics Network. Previously he was general manager of the health 
industry business unit at Microsoft. He has also held senior positions in 
health policy and finance at the state level.

Kentaro Toyama is a visiting scholar in the School of Information at the 
University of California, Berkeley. He is working on a book that argues that 
increasing wisdom should be the primary focus of global development. In 2004, 
Toyama co-founded Microsoft Research India, where he started an 
interdisciplinary research group to understand how electronic technology could 
support the socio-economic development of the world?s impoverished communities. 
The group?s award-winning projects ? including Digital Green, MultiPoint, and 
Text-Free UI ? have been seminal in ICT-for-development research. Since 2009, 
he has been active as a vocal critic of the hype that pervades technology 
projects in international development. Prior to his time in India, Toyama did 
computer vision and multimedia research at Microsoft Research in Redmond, WA, 
USA and Cambridge, UK, and taught mathematics at Ashesi University in Accra, 
Ghana. He received a PhD in C! omputer Science at Yale and his bachelors from 
Harvard in Physics. 
http://www.kentarotoyama.org<http://tracking.etapestry.com/t/19764616/612681688/54355895/0/>









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