Publication | Closed Access
The Effect of Politics on ICT4D
13
Citations
34
References
2012
Year
Mobile Phone NetworkEconomic DevelopmentEducationCommunicationTechnology LawIct GovernanceDemocracyGovernment Simulation GamePolitical CommunicationPublic PolicyE-democracyInformation SocietyComparative PoliticsDigital MediaTechnology PolicyTechnology GovernanceTechnologyPolitical FreedomsArtsMedia LawsPolitical Science
Zimbabwe is the best contemporary example of how politics can affect economic development. Equally as significant, and yet under studied, is the effect of politics on Information and Communication Technologies for development (ICT4D). In this case study of government of Zimbabwe’s five year battle to prevent Econet Wireless from operating a mobile phone network, the authors present the fear for the conviviality of ICTs as a reason why dictatorial states often restrict free use of ICTs and how this can inhibit its role in fostering development. Using a combination of aspects of Thomas Hobbes’ political theory and Sen’s capability approach the authors show how passions like fear for the power of ICTs in private hands and the appetite for proceeds from the telecoms sector fuelled a five year legal battle that was eventually won by Econet. A framework for assessing the motives behind restrictive political action and the concomitant erosion of political freedoms which inhibits free ICT use and investment in the sector is also presented.
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