Framing M4D: The Utility of Continuity and the Dual Heritage of “Mobiles and Development"

Posted by MarkWeingarten on Jan 13, 2011
Author: 
Donner, Jonathan
ISSN/ISBN Number: 
1681
Publication Type: 
Journal article
Publication Date: 
Dec 2010
Publisher/Journal: 
The Electronic Journal on Information Systems in Developing Countries
Publication language: 
English
Abstract: 

The paper suggests that research on the role of mobile telephony for socioeconomic development (M4D) draws on two frames. One frame stresses the relative freedom of telephone users to do whatever they choose. The other stresses how technologies and technology-led interventions are embedded in recursive, context specific relationships with user communities. Together these frames support M4D’s “dual heritage”. After detailing current M4D archetypes representing each heritage, the paper introduces a conceptual and practical synthesis, that is, large-scale platforms for distributed, semi-constrained interaction.

This paper considers two examples of such platforms—MXit, South Africa’s mobile social networking service and M-PESA, Kenya’s mobile money transfer system—including both anticipated and unanticipated consequences of operating “at scale” and beyond the confines of a controlled M4D intervention. Finally, this paper introduces implications of the dual heritage and of the rise of hybrid platforms for research and practice.

Countries: 
Upload Paper: 
Framing M4D: The Utility of Continuity and the Dual Heritage of “Mobiles and Development" data sheet 1750 Views
Author: 
Donner, Jonathan
ISSN/ISBN Number: 
1681
Publication Type: 
Journal article
Publication Date: 
Dec 2010
Publisher/Journal: 
The Electronic Journal on Information Systems in Developing Countries
Publication language: 
English
Abstract: 

The paper suggests that research on the role of mobile telephony for socioeconomic development (M4D) draws on two frames. One frame stresses the relative freedom of telephone users to do whatever they choose. The other stresses how technologies and technology-led interventions are embedded in recursive, context specific relationships with user communities. Together these frames support M4D’s “dual heritage”. After detailing current M4D archetypes representing each heritage, the paper introduces a conceptual and practical synthesis, that is, large-scale platforms for distributed, semi-constrained interaction.

This paper considers two examples of such platforms—MXit, South Africa’s mobile social networking service and M-PESA, Kenya’s mobile money transfer system—including both anticipated and unanticipated consequences of operating “at scale” and beyond the confines of a controlled M4D intervention. Finally, this paper introduces implications of the dual heritage and of the rise of hybrid platforms for research and practice.

Countries: 
Upload Paper: 

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd><p><br> <b><i><blockquote>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options