The Journal of Information Technologies and International Development (ITID) 
invites submissions for a special issue titled ICT goes to work: Skills and 
economic opportunities for marginalized groups.

Submission deadline: March 30th. Please visit http://mitpress.mit.edu/itid for 
more information about ITID, its author guidelines, and to submit a paper for 
this issue. When submitting the paper please indicate in the field "comments to 
the editors" that it is for the ICT skills and employability special issue

Guest editors :
Chris Coward and Maria Garrido (Center for Information & Society, ICT and 
Development Group, University of Washington) and Akthar Badshah (Community 
Affairs, Microsoft Corporation)

A fundamental premise of ICT and international development is that people 
equipped with basic ICT skills should be more employable than those without 
these skills, and in turn have access to increased economic opportunities. Many 
nongovernmental organizations, telecenters in particular, state that improving 
the economic livelihood of their communities is one of their most important 
missions. Many training programs from donor and public-supported to privately 
operated, have been built with the express purpose of providing the people who 
come into the centers with the basic skills they need to be hired by a local 
company, obtain a better-paying job, or start a microenterprise.

This special issue on ICT goes to work: Skills and economic opportunities for 
marginalized groups invites papers that address this topic with novel, 
theoretically grounded, and methodologically sound research. We will also 
accept a limited number of practitioner submissions. Papers may address the 
following questions, for example:
*       To what extent does having basic ICT skills affect an individual's 
employment prospects (e.g., quantitative analyses of income differentials, 
numbers and types of jobs that are available)?
*       Have basic ICT skills positively affected microenterprise creation?
*       How does gaining ICT skills affect employability compared with gaining 
other types of skills (e.g., learning English, learning how to search for jobs)?
*       What are the approaches and outcomes of different training programs?
*       What government policies and other factors influence employability?

This special issue is primarily concerned with basic ICT skills (e.g., computer 
fundamentals, productivity applications, employment sector specific 
applications) and programs targeting marginalized populations, not with the 
advanced engineering skills needed for employment in, for instance, the IT 
export service sector.

The topic of this ITID special issue is inherently multidisciplinary. The 
editors welcome a diverse pool of submissions from fields such as economics, 
development communications, education, rural sociology, engineering, and public 
policy.

Information Technologies and International Development (ITID) is the leading 
journal focusing on the intersection of information and communication 
technologies (ICT) with international development. ITID is published by the MIT 
Press and edited at the University of Southern California and the Georgia 
Institute of Technology.

If you have any questions related to this special issue, please contact:

Maria Garrido, PhD
Research Associate
ICT and Development Group
Cente for Information & Society
University of Washington
www.cis.washington.edu/ictd
1 (206) 685 0812


_______________________________________________
telecentres mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman-new.greennet.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/telecentres
To unsubscribe, send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word UNSUBSCRIBE 
in the body of the message.

Reply via email to