Monday, November 30th, 2015
12:00-1:30pm (lunch at 12pm, talk starts at 12:30pm)
Bloedel Hall 070
Use of Mobile Devices in Public Access to ICTs: Preliminary results from a 
study in Latin America
Venues for Public Access to ICTs (PAVs) and Mobile Technologies have been 
extensively studied for their potential to give access to information and 
enabling underserved communities’ development, especially in the developing 
world. The field of ICT for Development (ICT4D) addressed them, one after the 
other, as possible ways to bridge the digital divide.
At first, the rapid growth of mobile technologies adoption was considered as 
the end of the need for PAVs. With more than 6 billion mobile subscriptions in 
the world, and more people having access to a mobile than to electricity or 
clean water in developing countries, mobiles have been reshaping the 
technological ecosystem of access. Yet, PAVs have not been replaced by mobiles. 
While we can envision that PAVs are starting to include mobile technologies to 
provide their services, very few studies have been considered the topic so far.
In this conversation, preliminary results from an online survey conducted among 
Latin American PAVs’ operators will be presented. Results will inform on both 
the variety of mobile-related services that PAVs are providing in the region, 
and on operators’ perception of mobile technologies as having a role to support 
development.
Sara Vannini is a visiting scholar at UW’s Technology and Social Change Group 
(TASCHA). Sara is also a postdoctoral research fellow with the BeCHANGE group 
and Executive Director of the NewMinE – New Media in Education Lab at the 
University of Italian Switzerland (USI), Lugano, Switzerland. Sara’s research 
is in the field of Information and Communication Technologies for Development, 
focusing in particular on the issues of Public Access to ICTs and the 
appropriation and social representation of technologies in underserved areas of 
developing countries. She holds a Ph.D. in Communication Sciences from USI, and 
an M.A. in Latin American Literatures from Bologna University, Italy.

See more at: http://www.saravannini.com<http://www.saravannini.com/>




Sara Vannini, PhD
Visiting Researcher - TASCHA
Executive Director - NewMinE Lab
PostDoctoral Researcher - BeCHANGE Research Group
mailto: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
website: http://www.saravannini.com<http://www.saravannini.com/>
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