2017
DOI: 10.1002/j.1681-4835.2017.tb00578.x
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The Impact of Connectivity in Africa: Grand Visions and the Mirage of Inclusive Digital Development

Abstract: Corporations, development organisations and governments have launched ambitious programmes to 'connect the unconnected', reasoning that this creates economic growth and inclusive development. This paper contrasts these actors' discourses with evidence from academic research. The evidence suggests a highly uneven economic impact of Internet connectivity across geographies and social strata. The analysed sources of discourse (African ICT policies and reports by international organisations) instead propose Grand … Show more

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Cited by 51 publications
(50 citation statements)
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References 35 publications
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“…Aid industry discourses often approach digital connectivity as a taken-forgranted social good, despite robust evidence that its impacts are asymmetrical across geographies and socio-economic stratifications (Friederici, Ojanperä, and Graham 2017). For example, aid industry participants imagined a range of 'functional' SSI use cases that were specifically about extending refugees' access to SIM registration (which usually requires ID) and therefore mobile phones.…”
Section: Competing Logics (Iii): New Economic Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Aid industry discourses often approach digital connectivity as a taken-forgranted social good, despite robust evidence that its impacts are asymmetrical across geographies and socio-economic stratifications (Friederici, Ojanperä, and Graham 2017). For example, aid industry participants imagined a range of 'functional' SSI use cases that were specifically about extending refugees' access to SIM registration (which usually requires ID) and therefore mobile phones.…”
Section: Competing Logics (Iii): New Economic Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nairobi's role model hub promoted the idea that a single organization, physically embodied by not much more than a space with hot desks, could be a catalyst for the economic development of an entire low-income nation. iHub's leadership deftly connected its own context-dependent visions (meso-level discourses) with paradigmatic notions of entrepreneurial and technology-led development (Avgerou 2010;Friederici, Ojanperä, and Graham 2017;Steyaert and Katz 2004), forming a narrative with a wide appeal for a large and diverse set of audiences, including media, development organizations, and governments.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ultimately, this chapter warns against the supply-side focus and functionalism that is implicit in donors' and the media's accounts of hubs: the fact that hubs have diffused quickly does not say anything about the local demand for hubs, nor does it speak to hubs' impact or success. Instead, the diffusion of hubs appears to have been the result of a match between what hubs have been envisioned to do and contemporary paradigms of entrepreneurship-and technology-led economic development (Avgerou 2010;Friederici, Ojanperä, and Graham 2017;Steyaert and Katz 2004). For policy and practice, it will be necessary to move beyond the hub hype, and to think through limitations and negative side effects.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Africa, digital infrastructure investments (ICTs and other technologies, including revision of old and adoption of new regulatory frameworks) have increased over the years (Batuo, 2015;Friederici et al, 2017). Governments and other actors such as NGOs and international organisations are committing to change the digital infrastructure landscape in developing countries (Batuo, 2015).…”
Section: Critical Perspectives On Technology Impact Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rural communities in sub-Saharan Africa are characterized by high levels of poverty and poor access to infrastructure, both physical and digital (IFAD, 2016). Even though there are contestations on the contributions of digital infrastructure 1 towards the development of rural communities (Friederici, et al, 2017), the lack of digital infrastructure can act as a poverty trap. For instance, the lack of digital infrastructure in rural communities precludes the rural population from participating in the growing digital economy, exacerbates information asymmetries and perpetuates social exclusion.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%