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El. knyga: Public Policy and Technological Transformations in Africa: Nurturing Policy Entrepreneurship, Policy Tools and Citizen Participation

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This book examines the practical linkages between public policy and fourth industrial revolution technological developments in African politics and governance. It broadly deals with three key areas – policy entrepreneurship, policy tools, and citizen participation functions of 4IR – in order to better understand the interfaces between public policy and technological transformations on the continent. It presents incisive case studies on topics including AI policies, mobile money, e-budgeting, digital economy, digitalising agriculture and digital ethical dilemmas, in order to throw light on African public policy and technological proliferations within the broader contexts of state politics and governance. The book will appeal to students, instructors, researchers and practitioners interested in African governance and digital transformations in developing countries.
Chapter 1: Crafting Policy Technologies (PolicyTechs) from FinTechs,
CivicTechs, GovTechs: An Introduction.- Part 1: TECHNOLOGIES AS PUBLIC POLICY
TOOLS AND VENUES.
Chapter 2:  State Entrepreneurship in Africa: Realising
digital transformation for Policy effectiveness in selected countries.-
Chapter 3: Technological Leapfrogging and Innovation: Re-Imagining Evaluation
Approaches and Practice in Africa.
Chapter 4: Digital Technologies, Data
Commons and Rights in Africa: The Case of DigitalTransport4Africa.
Chapter
5: Biometric turn and the quest of public interest. Assessing the National
Identification policy in Cameroon.
Chapter 6: Digital Participatory
Budgeting and Policymaking in Botswana.- Part 2: TECHNOLOGIES NURTURING
POLICY ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND PEFORMANCE.
Chapter 7: The Digital Economy and
Youth Employment in Africa.
Chapter 8: Digitalisation of agricultural policy
and policy performance in Tanzania.
Chapter 9: Information Technology, The
Complexity of Joint Action, and Child Protection Policy implementation in
Kenya.
Chapter 10: Mobilising and Securing Private Financial Flows from
Digital Business Platforms and Curbing Tech Enabled IFFs to Finance SDGs in
Africa.- Part 3: TECHNOLOGIES AS SPACES FOR CITIZEN PARTICIPATION.
Chapter
11: Strengthening citizen agencies in policymaking through Social media.-
Chapter 12: Social media and public policymaking in Southern Africa.
Chapter
13: Technology-mediated Transparency, Accountability, and Participation in
the realisation of Citizen-centred Health Interventions: Case Study of
MobiSAfAIDS in Southern Africa.
Chapter 14: Digitalising Decentralisation
Policy across regions in Africa.- Part 4: EMERGING CHALLENGES.
Chapter
15: Regulatory issues for the promotion of entrepreneurship in electronic
money in the CEMAC sub-region.
Chapter 16: Ethical dilemmas in Public
Innovations and ICT solutions during COVID-19 in Kenya.
Gedion Onyango is a Researcher at the Firoz Lalji Institute for Africa, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK.