Social and economic perspectives on the role of information and communication technology for development
β Scribed by Sajda Qureshi
- Publisher
- Taylor and Francis Group
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 37 KB
- Volume
- 15
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0268-1102
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Development is an improvement in the lives of people and their communities. When investigating the effects of information technology on development, we study the ways in which technologies that enable information to be communicated improve the lives of people in their communities, regions, countries, or even groups of countries. This can be studied by investigating the social impacts on development of the technologies. The social concept of development suggests that people participate in improving their circumstances through the development of healthcare, education, environment, and community services (Apthorpe, 1999;Arce, 2003;Midgley, 2003). Social development considers improvements in the lives of people through programs in healthcare, education, and the environment that are often implemented by governments. When governments make use of information and communication technologies to improve their services, they might also contribute to social development. Some authors suggest that governments make policy based on discourse that has recourse to neat, easily available and powerfully constructed sets of institutional, legislative, and financial resources (Apthorpe, 1999;Midgley, 2003). These policies are implemented to bring about social development. Social development activities are designed to raise living standards, increase local participation in development, and address the needs of vulnerable and oppressed groups (Midgley, 2003). Economic development is a means of studying development that considers improvements in the lives of people through income generation, job creation, and other factors such as trade and migration. Theories of economic development try to predict the choices people make in order to improve the quality of their lives and offer tools that policy makers can use to balance the cyclical changes in economies. Development theorists such as Schumpeter ( 2002) offer empirical evidence of how economies can benefit from innovation, education, and foreign investments. The papers in this issue offer compelling contributions to both social and economic development and into the role of information and communication technology in bringing this about.
The first paper in this issue, entitled "Software Exports Development in Costa Rica: Potential for Policy Reforms," is coauthored by Brian Nicholson and Sundeep Sahay and was accepted as part of the special issue edited by Leiser Silva and Chris Westrup. The rest of the papers in the Silva and Westrup special issue will be published in the following issue
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The purpose of this volume is to bring together various analyses by international scholars of the social and cultural impact of information technology on individuals and societies (preface, n.p.). It grew from the First International Conference on Human Perspectives in the Internet Society held in C
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