default search action
Information Technology for Development, Volume 18
Volume 18, Number 1, 2012
Editorial
- Annika Andersson, Åke Grönlund, Gudrun Wicander:
Development as freedom - how the Capability Approach can be used in ICT4D research and practice. 1-4
- Devinder Thapa, Maung K. Sein, Øystein Sæbø:
Building collective capabilities through ICT in a mountain region of Nepal: where social capital leads to collective action. 5-22 - Mathias Hatakka, Jenny Lagsten:
The capability approach as a tool for development evaluation - analyzing students' use of internet resources. 23-41 - Dorothea Kleine, Ann Light, Maria-José Montero:
Signifiers of the life we value? - considering human development, technologies and Fair Trade from the perspective of the capabilities approach. 42-60 - Aditya Johri, Joyojeet Pal:
Capable and convivial design (CCD): a framework for designing information and communication technologies for human development. 61-75 - William Wresch, Simon Fraser:
ICT - enabled market freedoms and their impacts in developing countries: Opportunities, frustrations, and surprises. 76-86
Volume 18, Number 2, 2012
Editorial
- Thomas Molony:
ICT and human mobility: cases from developing countries and beyond. 87-90
- Vanessa Frías-Martínez, Jesus Virseda, Enrique Frías-Martínez:
On the relation between socio-economic status and physical mobility. 91-106 - Joshua E. Blumenstock:
Inferring patterns of internal migration from mobile phone call records: evidence from Rwanda. 107-125 - Max Leonard Schaub:
Lines across the desert: mobile phone use and mobility in the context of trans-Saharan migration. 126-144 - Gina Porter, Kate R. Hampshire, Albert Abane, Alister Munthali, Elsbeth Robson, Mac Mashiri, Augustine Tanle:
Youth, mobility and mobile phones in Africa: findings from a three-country study. 145-162 - Nimmi Rangaswamy, Sumitra Nair:
The PC in an Indian urban slum: enterprise and entrepreneurship in ICT4D 2.0. 163-180
Volume 18, Number 3, 2012
- Sajda Qureshi:
Discovering development from information technologies: does open access to technology improve the lives of people? 181-184
- Kamala Gollakota, James B. Pick, P. Sathyapriya:
Using technology to alleviate poverty: use and acceptance of telecenters in rural India. 185-208 - Katherine T. Ratliffe, Kavita Rao, James Skouge, Joakim Peter:
Navigating the currents of change: technology, inclusion, and access for people with disabilities in the Pacific. 209-225 - Christopher G. Reddick, Hisham M. E. Abdelsalam, Hatem ElKadi:
Channel choice and the digital divide in e-government: the case of Egypt. 226-246 - Kweku Ewusi-Mensah:
Problems of information technology diffusion in sub-Saharan Africa: the case of Ghana. 247-269
- Solomon Negash, Salehu Anteneh, Richard T. Watson:
A PhD in information systems for emerging economies: the Addis Ababa University model. 270-276
Volume 18, Number 4, 2012
- Sajda Qureshi:
As the global digital divide narrows, who is being left behind? 277-280
- Antonio Díaz-Andrade, Cathy Urquhart:
Unveiling the modernity bias: a critical examination of the politics of ICT4D. 281-292 - Yael Valerie Perez, Yahel Ben-David:
Internet as freedom - does the internet enhance the freedoms people enjoy? 293-310 - Monideepa Tarafdar, Prashanth Anekal, Ramendra Singh:
Market development at the bottom of the pyramid: examining the role of information and communication technologies. 311-331
- Maung K. Sein, Bjørn Furuholt:
Intermediaries: bridges across the digital divide. 332-344 - Alvaro Armenta Ramade, Arturo Serrano-Santoyo, Mayer R. Cabrera-Flores, Roberto Conte:
The new digital divide: the confluence of broadband penetration, sustainable development, technology adoption and community participation. 345-353
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.