TASCHA TALK - Araba Sey
Do public access ICTs have an impact on socio-economic development? Findings of 
the Global Impact Study

Monday --  February 4, 2013, from 12:00-1:30 pm
Mary Gates Hall, Room 420

or remotely via Adobe Connect<http://connect.washington.edu/ischool-rcons/>

This TASCHA Talk is part of the iSchool's<http://ischool.uw.edu> Research 
Conversation Series

Barely two decades ago, public access information and communication 
technologies (ICTs) were high on the global development agenda as the best 
approach to making computers and the internet available to people in low and 
middle-income countries. Shared access in telecenters, libraries, and similar 
venues would make ICTs more accessible and affordable. Furthermore, this could 
be coupled with other valuable services such as digital training, job placement 
resources, and delivery of government services; thereby charting a path to 
social and economic inclusion for disadvantaged populations. In recent years, 
however, this view has fallen out of favor in some government and donor 
communities, due to a variety of factors - lack of clear evidence of positive 
socio-economic impact (particularly in terms of returns to investment), the 
preponderance of internet cafes offering relatively low-cost access while 
publicly funded models struggle for sustainability, the appearance that public 
access venues are mostly populated by young people preoccupied with social 
networking and entertainment, and the apparent redundancy of computers in the 
wake of mobile telephony. Yet on the ground, based on patronage levels, it 
appears that public access venues are important to those who use them. And 
while some agencies are dropping public access from their portfolio of 
development strategies, others are ramping up their efforts to expand public 
access to ICTs.

Is the dismissal of public access ICTs warranted? Have public access venues 
outlived their usefulness, or are they (still) effective tools for social 
inclusion? Is their utility broad-based or limited to particular contexts and 
areas of endeavor? What precisely are the impacts (if any) they deliver and 
how? Is public access a perfect substitute for private access to computer and 
internet technology? Designed and implemented by the Technology & Social Change 
Group (TASCHA<http://tascha.uw.edu/>) at the iSchool<http://ischool.uw.edu/>, 
the Global Impact Study<http://www.globalimpactstudy.org/> was designed to 
investigate  these types of questions, in the largest study of its kind.

This iSchool Research Conversation and TASCHA Talk, presented by Araba 
Sey<http://tascha.uw.edu/author/arabasey/>, discusses insights from the Global 
Impact Study. It outlines some dimensions of public access as a strategy for 
socio-economic development, addressing questions such as: who uses public 
access ICTs and why, what value do users perceive, what types of outcomes have 
users experienced and in what areas? Based on these findings we suggest how 
vested interests might realistically characterize the nature of public access 
impacts and make decisions about the role public access could play in their 
development agendas.

About Dr. Sey

Araba Sey<http://tascha.uw.edu/author/arabasey/> is a Research Assistant 
Professor at the University of Washington's Information School. Her research 
focuses on the social and economic implications of information and 
communication technologies (ICTs) including: the dynamics of mobile phone 
appropriation by low income populations and telecommunication industry actors, 
the impacts of public access to ICTs, and other manifestations of the 
interaction between ICTs and socio-economic development issues in low and 
middle income countries.

_______________________________________________
change mailing list
[email protected]
http://changemm.cs.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/change

Reply via email to