Assessing the contribution of information technology to socio-economic development: A case study from rural South Africa

Authors

  • Marita Turpin Department of Informatics University of Pretoria
  • Trish Alexander Department of Informatics University of Pretoria
  • Jackie Phahlamohlaka CSIR Defence, Peace, Safety and Security

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15353/joci.v9i4.3146

Keywords:

ICT for development, socio-economic development, social systems, systems thinking, structuration theory, autopoiesis

Abstract

This paper addresses the challenge of assessing an ICT for development (ICT4D) project’s contribution to the socio-economic development of the broader community where it is implemented. It argues for using a systems approach to deal with this challenge, since systems thinking is concerned with the performance of the total system. Systems thinking is seldom used in ICT4D, and is lacking in existing ICT4D impact assessment frameworks.  In this paper, the authors apply a social systems framework in an ICT4D case study. The framework is used to describe and assess the contribution of the ICT4D project to the socio-economic development of the larger community. Since Community Informatics (CI) embraces a broad socio-technical systems view, the work is relevant to a CI audience.

Author Biographies

Marita Turpin, Department of Informatics University of Pretoria

Senior lecturer, Department of Informatics

Trish Alexander, Department of Informatics University of Pretoria

Professor, Department of Informatics

Jackie Phahlamohlaka, CSIR Defence, Peace, Safety and Security

Competence Area Manager, CSIR DPSS

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Published

2013-12-03