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Development 2.0 and beyond: Challenges for ICT4D in 2013

Series
ICT for Development Seminar Series
Dr Thompson addresses some of the opportunities and contradictions presented by ICT4D and considers some emerging ways in which ICT4D researchers may contribute to the field.
The discipline of ICT4D has never appeared more, or less, relevant. On the one hand, technology has become unprecedentedly pervasive, plastic, mobile, and cheap; increasingly based on open standards, emerging, platform-based architectures beckon towards an empowered era of development hubs, mashups, and commercial and social enterprise that increasingly offer those in emerging economies an independent, 'continuous beta' of thought and activity. On the other, it might be said that such positive developments challenge those working in ICT4D, and even 'development' itself, to engage in a new way with people who are increasingly 'doing it for themselves'. In this talk, Thompson addresses some of the opportunities and contradictions presented by this tension, and considers some emerging ways in which ICT4D researchers may contribute to the field.

More in this series

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ICT for Development Seminar Series

Disjunctures and Connections: Case Studies of How Techno-politics Make and Cut Networks

In a development context, the ways in which new media objects (eg ICTs) are defined in relation to other objects, people and institutions map out new figurations of power and connection, that revalue and recombine political agency.
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Episode Information

Series
ICT for Development Seminar Series
People
Mark Thompson
Keywords
development
ICT4D
power
social media
media
internet
communication
innovation
regulation
information society
policy
politics
technology
Department: Oxford Internet Institute
Date Added: 16/01/2014
Duration: 01:10:02

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