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El. knyga: Information and Communication Technology for Development (ICT4D)

(University of Manchester, UK)
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Mobile phones are close to ubiquitous in developing countries; Internet and broadband access are becoming commonplace. Information and communication technologies (ICTs) thus represent the fastest, broadest and deepest technical change experienced in international development. They now affect every development sector – supporting the work of hundreds of millions of farmers and micro-entrepreneurs; creating millions of ICT-based jobs; assisting healthcare workers and teachers; facilitating political change; impacting climate change; but also linked with digital inequalities and harms – with the pace of change continuously accelerating.Information and Communication Technology for Development (ICT4D) provides the first dedicated textbook to examine and explain these emerging phenomena. It will help students, practitioners, researchers and other readers understand the place of ICTs within development; the ICT-enabled changes already underway; and the key issues and interventions that engage ICT4D practice and strategy.The book has a three-part structure. The first three chapters set out the foundations of ICT4D: the core relation between ICTs and development; the underlying components needed for ICT4D to work; and best practice in implementing ICT4D. Five chapters then analyse key development goals: economic growth, poverty eradication, social development, good governance and environmental sustainability. Each chapter assesses the goal-related impact associated with ICTs and key lessons from real-world cases. The final chapter looks ahead to emerging technologies and emerging models of ICT-enabled development.The book uses extensive in-text diagrams, tables and boxed examples with chapter-end discussion and assignment questions and further reading. Supported by online activities, video links, session outlines and slides, this textbook provides the basis for undergraduate, postgraduate and online learning modules on ICT4D.
List of figures
vii
List of tables
xi
List of boxes
xii
Acknowledgements xiv
Abbreviations xv
Introduction: information and communication technology for development (ICT4D) 1(4)
1 Understanding ICT4D
5(32)
1.1 What do we mean by "ICT4D"?
5(13)
1.2 What does "development" mean?
18(11)
1.3 Theoretical foundations of ICT4D
29(8)
2 Foundations of ICT4D
37(59)
2.1 The ICT4D value chain
37(5)
2.2 Technological foundations of ICT4D
42(11)
2.3 Human foundations of ICT4D
53(8)
2.4 Institutional foundations ofICT4D
61(21)
2.5 Financing ICT4D
82(3)
2.6 Digital inclusion and the "digital divide"
85(11)
3 Implementing ICT4D
96(39)
3.1 ICT4D strategy
96(7)
3.2 ICT4D design and implementation
103(17)
3.3 ICT4D adoption and use
120(5)
3.4 ICT4D monitoring and evaluation
125(10)
4 ICTs and economic growth
135(38)
4.1 Economic growth as a development goal
135(4)
4.2 ICTs and micro-economic growth
139(18)
4.3 ICTs and meso-economic growth
157(5)
4.4 ICTs and macro-economic growth
162(11)
5 ICTs, poverty and livelihoods
173(36)
5.1 Poverty eradication as a development goal
173(2)
5.2 ICTs and financial poverty
175(19)
5.3 ICTs and livelihoods
194(15)
6 ICTs and social development
209(38)
6.1 Social development as a development goal
209(2)
6.2 ICTs, health and development
211(15)
6.3 ICTs, education and development
226(11)
6.4 ICTs, capabilities and development
237(10)
7 e-Governance and development
247(34)
7.1 Good governance as a development goal
247(3)
7.2 e-Services and development
250(11)
7.3 e-Accountability and development
261(6)
7.4 e-Democracy and development
267(14)
8 ICTs and environmental sustainability
281(37)
8.1 Environmental sustainability as a development goal
281(2)
8.2 e-Mitigation and development
283(11)
8.3 e-Monitoring, e-strategy and development
294(8)
8.4 e-Adaptation, e-resilience and development
302(16)
9 The future of ICT4D
318(37)
9.1 Future directions in ICT4D
318(3)
9.2 Development 2.0
321(9)
9.3 Data-intensive development
330(11)
9.4 Open development
341(9)
9.5 ICT4D 3.0, Development 2.0 or Digital Development?
350(5)
Bibliography 355(46)
Index 401
Richard Heeks is Chair in Development Informatics at the University of Manchester, UK. He has researched, taught and practised ICTs and international development for more than 30 years.