1st Edition
Critical ICT4D (Information and Communication Technologies for Development)
The edited volume Critical ICT4D highlights the need for a paradigm change in theorising, designing, and researching Information and Communication Technologies for Development (ICT4D). Engaging authors from the Majority World and entering a process of restoring epistemic justice in knowledge production and ownership, the text:
- Reflects on the histories and narratives around development programmes, their deep-rooted socio-political background, and the power relations integrated into or induced by such measures
- Problematises the current scholarship and practices through decolonial and pluralistic approaches built with an explicit perspective of resisting epistemic violence
- Constructs justice-enacting engagements of technologies with society.
Offering thematic discussions in many development sectors with up-to-date case studies informed by recent research in the field, it sheds light on constructive contributions of critical ICT4D research. Written in accessible language, the book will appeal to postgraduate students, fellow researchers, policymakers in the fields of sociology, development studies, STS, critical data studies, surveillance studies, international relations, public administration, and information systems.
The Open Access version of this book, available at http://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) 4.0 license.
1 Introduction
Azadeh Akbari and Silvia Masiero
PART 1: Reflect
2 Digital Development Dilemma: From Progress to Control
Azadeh Akbari
3 The Evolution of ICT4D: Content, Context, and Process
Shirin Madon, Azadeh Akbari, and Silvia Masiero
4 Bringing Critical ICT4D from the Margin to the Centre
Tony Roberts
5 The Interface Position of ICT4D Research
Silvia Masiero
PART 2: Problematise
6 The Violence of Algorithmic Systems in Social Policy in Colombia: (Re) Localising the Digital Welfare State in the Postcolonial Context
Joan Lopez-Solano
7 Digital Humanitarianism: Orthodoxy and Lived Realities
Silvia Masiero
8 Reimaging Smart City Transplants for the Global South: A Post-Colonial Lens on Human Rights and Digital Sovereignty
Alina Wernick, Gabriel Udoh, and Emeline Banzuzi
PART 3: Reconstruct
9 From Data Governance to Data Ethics: Invoking Epistemological Plurality for Enabling a Critical Turn in ICT4D
Stefano Calzati
10 Design for Water Justice: Co-Developing Tools for Equitable Cities
Fenna Imara Hoefsloot, Andrea Jimenez, and Liliana
Miranda Sara
11 Social Media and Sisterhood in Latin America: Discourses and Practices
Illari Diez and Juan Bossio
Biography
Azadeh Akbari is Assistant Professor of Public Administration and Digital Transformation at the University of Twente, the Netherlands. She is a European Union’s Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions Global fellow for her project on Authoritarian Smart Cities. She is a member of the board of directors at the International Surveillance Studies Network and the founder and director of Surveillance in the Majority World Research Network. Her research focuses on digital authoritarianism, the use of surveillance technologies in urban spaces especially against women, and data justice.
Silvia Masiero is Associate Professor of Information Systems at the University of Oslo, Norway. Her research focuses on ICT4D, particularly on the role of digital platforms in socio-economic development processes, digital social protection, platform-mediated surveillance and decolonial approaches to information systems research. She is Editor-in-Chief of Information Technology for Development and Chair of the IFIP Working Group 9.4 on the Implications of Information and Digital Technologies for Development.