Please join us for the first Change meeting of the quarter!

This Tuesday at Change, Joshua Blumenstock will talk about* “*Big Data” and
Development: Empirical Research in Rwanda and Afghanistan

Are* *mobile phones really transforming the lives of the world’s poor?  In
this talk, I will describe how innovative sources of data can provide new
insight into the effects of Mobile Money and other phone-based services in
developing countries.  The talk will focus on a set of early stage projects
in Rwanda and Afghanistan that use terabytes of mobile phone data to
explore patterns of charity and altruism, migration and mobility, and
network diffusion and adoption.  By combining such data with randomized
control trials and natural experiments, I hope to develop a better
understanding of the role of new technologies in social and economic
behavior.

Joshua Blumenstock is an Assistant Professor at the Information School at
the University of Washington.  His research focuses on the economic and
social impacts of information and communication technologies, and the
development of new methods for the quantitative analysis of very large
data.  Recent projects use terabyte-scale data on network communication to
understand the adoption and diffusion of mobile technologies (Pakistan and
Mongolia), the welfare implications of Mobile Money (Rwanda and Uganda),
and the role of technological innovation in reducing corruption and
violence (Afghanistan).   Joshua has a Ph.D in Information Management and a
M.A. in Economics from U.C. Berkeley, and Bachelor’s degrees in Physics and
Computer Science from Wesleyan University in Middletown, CT.

What: Joshua Blumenstock on* “*Big Data” and Development: Empirical
Research in Rwanda and Afghanistan

When: Tuesday, January 15th at 12 noon

Where: The Allen Center, room CSE 203
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