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The Impact of Mobile Phone Uses in the Developing World: Giving Voice to the Rural Poor in the Congo

Author

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  • Sylvain K. Cibangu

    (Loughborough University, School of Business and Economics, Centre for Information Management, Loughborough, United Kingdom)

  • Mark Hepworth

    (Loughborough University, School of Business and Economics, Centre for Information Management, Loughborough, United Kingdom)

  • Donna Champion

    (Cranfield University, School of Management, Cranfield, United Kingdom)

Abstract

In recent years, the rise of information and communication technologies (ICTs) contrasted with the dire living conditions of the world's poorest has been the subject of debate among industry and academia. However, despite the amount of writings produced on mobile phones, Western bias is surprisingly unbridledly prevailing alongside the fêted dissemination of mobile phones. Expansive literature tends to present the rapid adoption of mobile phones among rural individuals, with little to no indication of how local values and voices are respected or promoted. We undertook semi-structured interviews with 16 rural chiefs to inquire into ways in which mobile phones enabled socio-economic development in the rural Congo. Rather than using quantitative, large-scale, or top-down data, we sought to give voice to chiefs themselves about the role of mobile phones. We found that Western bias dominates the literature and deployment of mobile phones more than usually acknowledged. We suggested some paths forward, while bringing the African communal Utu or Ubuntu culture to the center stage.

Suggested Citation

  • Sylvain K. Cibangu & Mark Hepworth & Donna Champion, 2017. "The Impact of Mobile Phone Uses in the Developing World: Giving Voice to the Rural Poor in the Congo," International Journal of Information Communication Technologies and Human Development (IJICTHD), IGI Global, vol. 9(2), pages 20-48, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:igg:jicthd:v:9:y:2017:i:2:p:20-48
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