Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

skip to main content
10.1145/2702123.2702573acmconferencesArticle/Chapter ViewAbstractPublication PageschiConference Proceedingsconference-collections
research-article

Residual Mobilities: Infrastructural Displacement and Post-Colonial Computing in Bangladesh

Published: 18 April 2015 Publication History

Abstract

This paper explores discrepancies between the founding assumptions of mobile and ubiquitous computing in the western world, and the starkly different experiences of mobility and infrastructure to be found in many post-colonial environments. Based on a field study of forced mobility and technology use among populations displaced by the Hatirjheel waterfront development project in Dhaka, Bangladesh, we make two basic arguments. First, we point to the partial nature of assumptions around mobility that frame the imagination of mainstream HCI research, and argue that different and heretofore residual experiences of mobility must also be accounted for in post-colonial and other marginal computing environments. Second, we document four forms of infrastructural experience -- dispossession, reconstitution, collaboration, and repair -- that characterize real-world engagements with infrastructure in such settings. We conclude with implications for HCI research and design, and reflections on how HCI researchers might better account for such experiences in their work.

References

[1]
Agar, J. Constant Touch: A Global History of the Mobile Phone. Icon Books, 2004.
[2]
Ahmed, S.I., Jackson, S.J., Ahmed, N., Ferdous, H.S., Rifat, M.R., Rizvi, A.S.M., Ahmed, S., Mansur, R.S. Protibadi: a platform for fighting sexual harassment in urban Bangladesh. In Proc. CHI'14, ACM (2014), 2695--2704.
[3]
Ahmed, S.I., Jackson, S.J., Zaber, M., Morshed, M.B., Ismail, M.H.B., and Afrose, S. Ecologies of Use and Design: Individual and Social Uses of Mobile Phones Within Low-Literate Rickshaw-Puller Communities in Urban Bangladesh. Proc. DEV-4, ACM (2013), 14:1--14:10.
[4]
Burrell, J. Evaluating Shared Access: social equality and the circulation of mobile phones in rural Uganda. Journal of Computer Mediated Communication 15, 2 (2010), 230--250.
[5]
Le Dantec, C.A. and Edwards, W.K. Designs on dignity: perceptions of technology among the homeless. In Proc. CHI '08, ACM (2008), 627--636.
[6]
Elyachar, J. Phatic labor, infrastructure, and the question of empowerment in Cairo. American Ethnologist 37, 3 (2010), 452--464.
[7]
Fields, G.S. Dualism in the Labor Market: a Perspective on the Lewis Model after Half a Century. The Manchester School 72, 6 (2004), 724--735.
[8]
Graham, S. and Marvin, S. Splintering urbanism: networked infrastructures, technological mobilities and the urban condition. Psychology Press, 2001.
[9]
Hardoy, J.E. and Satterthwaite, D. Squatter citizen: life in the urban Third World. Routledge, 2014.
[10]
Heimerl, K., Hasan, S., Ali, K., Brewer, E., and Parikh, T. Local, sustainable, small-scale cellular networks. In Proc. ICTD'13, ACM (2013), 2--12.
[11]
Houston, L. Inventive Infrastructure: An Exploration of Mobile Phone. PhD Thesis, Lanchaster University, 2014.
[12]
Irani, L., Vertesi, J., Dourish, P., Philip, K., and Grinter, R.E. Postcolonial computing: a lens on design and development. In Proc. CHI'10, ACM, 1311--1320.
[13]
Jackson, S.J., Ahmed, S.I., and Rifat, M.R. Learning, innovation, and sustainability among mobile phone repairers in Dhaka, Bangladesh. In Proc. DIS'14, ACM (2014), 905--914.
[14]
Jackson, S.J., Pompe, A., and Krieshok, G. Things fall apart: maintenance, repair, and technology for education initiatives in rural Namibia. In Proc. iConference'11, ACM (2012), 107--116.
[15]
Jackson, S.J., Pompe, A., and Krieshok, G. Repair worlds: maintenance, repair, and ICT for development in rural Namibia. In Proc. CSCW'12, ACM (2012), 107--116.
[16]
Jamasb, T. Electricity sector reform in developing countries: a survey of empirical evidence on determinants and performance. World Bank Publications 3549, (2005).
[17]
Larkin, B. The politics and poetics of infrastructure. Annual Review of Anthropology 42, (2013), 327--343.
[18]
Lindtner, S., Nardi, B., Wang, Y., Mainwaring, S., Jing, H., and Liang, W. Emerging sites of HCI innovation: hackerspaces, hardware startups and incubators. Proc. CSCW'08, ACM (2008), 371--382.
[19]
Mahbub, A.Q.M. and Islam, N. The growth of slums in Dhaka City: a spatio temporal analysis. In SU Ahmed Eds. Dhaka Past Present Future. Dhaka: Asiatic Society of Bangladesh, 1991, 508--521.
[20]
Massey, D. Power-geometry and a progressive sense of place. In Bird, J., Curtis, B., Putnam, T., & Tickner, L. eds. Mapping the Futures: Local Cultures, Global Change. Routledge, 2012.
[21]
Medhi, I., Patnaik, S., Brunskill, E., Gautama, S.N., Theis, W., and Toyama, K. Designing mobile interfaces for novice and low-literacy users. ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction 18, 1 (2011), 2:1--2:27.
[22]
Palen, L., Vieweg, S., Sutton, J., Liu, S.B., and Hughes, A.L. Crisis informatics: Studying crisis in a networked world. In Proc. e-Social Science'07.
[23]
Patel, N., Chittamuru, D., Jain, A., Dave, P., and Parikh, T. Avaaj Otalo: a field study of an interactive voice forum for small farmers in rural India. Proc. CHI'10, ACM (2010), 733--742.
[24]
Rangaswamy, N. and Sambasivan, N. Cutting Chai, Jugaad, and Here Pheri: towards UbiComp for a global community. Personal and Ubiquitous Computing 15, 6 (2011), 553--564.
[25]
Rouvinen, P. Diffusion of digital mobile telephony: Are developing countries different? Telecommunications Policy 30, 1 (2006), 46--63.
[26]
Sambasivan, N., Cutrell, E., Toyama, K., and Nardi, B. Intermediated technology use in developing communities. In Proc. CHI'10, ACM (2010), 2583--2592.
[27]
Sassen, S. Expulsions: Brutality and Complexity in the Global Economy. Harvard University Press, 2014.
[28]
Sherwani, J., Ali, N., Mirza, S., et al. HealthLine: Speech-based access to health information by lowliterate users. In Proc. ICTD'07, IEEE (2007), 1--9.
[29]
Star, S.L. and Bowker, G.C. Enacting silence: Residual categories as a challenge for ethics, information systems, and communication. Ethics and Information Technology 9, 4 (2007), 273--280.
[30]
Suchman, L. Practice-based design of information systems: notes from the hyperdeveloped world. The information society 18, 2 (2002), 139--144.
[31]
Suchman, L. Human-machine reconfigurations: Plans and situated actions. Cambridge University Press, 2007.
[32]
Todaro, M.P. and Smith, S. Economic Development. Pearson Education, 2014.
[33]
Tomlinson, B., Silberman, M., Patterson, D., Pan, Y., and Blevis, E. Collapse informatics: augmenting the sustainability & ICT4D discourse in HCI. In Proc. CHI'12, (2012), 655--664.
[34]
UNICEF Bangladesh. Understanding urban inequalities in Bangladesh: A prerequisite for achieving Vision 2021. 2010.
[35]
Urry, J. Mobilities. Polity, 2007.
[36]
Woelfer, J.P. and Hendry, D.G. Homeless young people's experiences with information systems: life and work in a community technology center. In Proc. CHI'10, ACM (2010), 1291--1300.
[37]
"War's Human Cost": World's population of displaced tops 50 million. UN News Centre, 2014. http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=48089
[38]
Crisismappers. http://crisismappers.net/.

Cited By

View all
  • (2024)Union Makes Us Strong: Space, Technology, and On-Demand Ridesourcing Digital Labour PlatformsProceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction10.1145/36870028:CSCW2(1-36)Online publication date: 8-Nov-2024
  • (2024)El costo de la independencia: Latino house-cleaners in Technology-Mediated Labour MarketsProceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction10.1145/36869998:CSCW2(1-32)Online publication date: 8-Nov-2024
  • (2024)Collective Infrastructural Speculations: A Situated Understanding of Pasts, Presents & Futures of Resilient Community Networks.Proceedings of the Participatory Design Conference 2024: Full Papers - Volume 110.1145/3666094.3666111(159-172)Online publication date: 11-Aug-2024
  • Show More Cited By

Index Terms

  1. Residual Mobilities: Infrastructural Displacement and Post-Colonial Computing in Bangladesh

    Recommendations

    Comments

    Please enable JavaScript to view thecomments powered by Disqus.

    Information & Contributors

    Information

    Published In

    cover image ACM Conferences
    CHI '15: Proceedings of the 33rd Annual ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
    April 2015
    4290 pages
    ISBN:9781450331456
    DOI:10.1145/2702123
    Permission to make digital or hard copies of all or part of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for components of this work owned by others than the author(s) must be honored. Abstracting with credit is permitted. To copy otherwise, or republish, to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and/or a fee. Request permissions from [email protected].

    Sponsors

    Publisher

    Association for Computing Machinery

    New York, NY, United States

    Publication History

    Published: 18 April 2015

    Permissions

    Request permissions for this article.

    Check for updates

    Author Tags

    1. bangladesh
    2. development
    3. ethnography
    4. ictd
    5. infrastructure
    6. mobility
    7. post-colonial computing

    Qualifiers

    • Research-article

    Funding Sources

    • Intel Science and Technology Center for Social Computing

    Conference

    CHI '15
    Sponsor:
    CHI '15: CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
    April 18 - 23, 2015
    Seoul, Republic of Korea

    Acceptance Rates

    CHI '15 Paper Acceptance Rate 486 of 2,120 submissions, 23%;
    Overall Acceptance Rate 6,199 of 26,314 submissions, 24%

    Upcoming Conference

    CHI 2025
    ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
    April 26 - May 1, 2025
    Yokohama , Japan

    Contributors

    Other Metrics

    Bibliometrics & Citations

    Bibliometrics

    Article Metrics

    • Downloads (Last 12 months)81
    • Downloads (Last 6 weeks)5
    Reflects downloads up to 10 Dec 2024

    Other Metrics

    Citations

    Cited By

    View all
    • (2024)Union Makes Us Strong: Space, Technology, and On-Demand Ridesourcing Digital Labour PlatformsProceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction10.1145/36870028:CSCW2(1-36)Online publication date: 8-Nov-2024
    • (2024)El costo de la independencia: Latino house-cleaners in Technology-Mediated Labour MarketsProceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction10.1145/36869998:CSCW2(1-32)Online publication date: 8-Nov-2024
    • (2024)Collective Infrastructural Speculations: A Situated Understanding of Pasts, Presents & Futures of Resilient Community Networks.Proceedings of the Participatory Design Conference 2024: Full Papers - Volume 110.1145/3666094.3666111(159-172)Online publication date: 11-Aug-2024
    • (2024)Infrastructuring Community Fridges for Food CommoningProceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction10.1145/36373528:CSCW1(1-27)Online publication date: 26-Apr-2024
    • (2024)Low-Resourced Languages and Online Knowledge Repositories: A Need-Finding Study.Proceedings of the 2024 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems10.1145/3613904.3642605(1-21)Online publication date: 11-May-2024
    • (2024)Design With Rural-To-Urban Migrant Women: Opportunities and Challenges in Designing within a Precarious Marriage Context in South ChinaProceedings of the 2024 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems10.1145/3613904.3641990(1-14)Online publication date: 11-May-2024
    • (2024)In-Between Visuals and Visible: The Impacts of Text-to-Image Generative AI Tools on Digital Image-making Practices in the Global SouthProceedings of the 2024 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems10.1145/3613904.3641951(1-18)Online publication date: 11-May-2024
    • (2024)“You Are Not Here”: Coordinating Repair under OccupationProceedings of the Association for Information Science and Technology10.1002/pra2.101061:1(80-91)Online publication date: 15-Oct-2024
    • (2023)Community Tech Workers: Scaffolding Digital Engagement Among Underserved Minority BusinessesProceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction10.1145/36101807:CSCW2(1-25)Online publication date: 4-Oct-2023
    • (2023)Many Worlds of Ethics: Ethical Pluralism in CSCWCompanion Publication of the 2023 Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing10.1145/3584931.3611291(490-496)Online publication date: 14-Oct-2023
    • Show More Cited By

    View Options

    Login options

    View options

    PDF

    View or Download as a PDF file.

    PDF

    eReader

    View online with eReader.

    eReader

    Media

    Figures

    Other

    Tables

    Share

    Share

    Share this Publication link

    Share on social media