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Why Data Matters for Development? Exploring Data Justice, Micro-Entrepreneurship, Mobile Money and Financial Inclusion

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  • Sajda Qureshi

Abstract

With the widespread extraction of very large datasets, artificial intelligence using machine learning hold the promise to address socio-economic problems such as poverty, environmental safety, food production, security and the spread of disease. These applications entail Big Data for Development in which social problems, poverty, food security and responses to climate disasters can be solved in the most efficient and effective manner. This brave new world of solving pressing problems through machine learning has several dark sides. A data divide is being created that leaves the most vulnerable populations out of the solutions being created while discriminating against those whose data is churned by obscure algorithms. Complex mathematical models together with computing algorithms produce scores that are used to evaluate the lives of the masses. These systems have scaled to enormous proportions, changing lives by affecting credit scores, job prospects and access to healthcare. The promise of fairness, transparency, cost-effectiveness and efficiency gives rise to powerful scoring algorithms that have the power to create mass devastation while discriminating against the most vulnerable. Questions arise as to: What injustices (types of injustice) are created by datafication of development? how can the injustices caused by the extraction, analysis and commoditization of data be alleviated? Who has access to and what is being done with private data? And for whose benefit or purpose is personal data being extracted? Such questions are explored through the contributions in on data justice, the use of ICTs by micro-Entrepreneurs, mobile money and financial inclusion offered through papers in this issue.

Suggested Citation

  • Sajda Qureshi, 2020. "Why Data Matters for Development? Exploring Data Justice, Micro-Entrepreneurship, Mobile Money and Financial Inclusion," Information Technology for Development, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 26(2), pages 201-213, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:titdxx:v:26:y:2020:i:2:p:201-213
    DOI: 10.1080/02681102.2020.1736820
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    Cited by:

    1. Ajay Purohit & Gaurav Chopra & Parshuram G. Dangwal, 2022. "Measuring the Effectiveness of the Project Management Information System (PMIS) on the Financial Wellness of Rural Households in the Hill Districts of Uttarakhand, India: An IS-FW Model," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 14(21), pages 1-29, October.
    2. Ahmed, Shamira, 2021. "A Gender perspective on the use of Artificial Intelligence in the African FinTech Ecosystem: Case studies from South Africa, Kenya, Nigeria, and Ghana," 23rd ITS Biennial Conference, Online Conference / Gothenburg 2021. Digital societies and industrial transformations: Policies, markets, and technologies in a post-Covid world 238002, International Telecommunications Society (ITS).
    3. Sylvain Cibangu, 2022. "Posters and Development: A Case Study of Cell Phone Posters in the Rural Congo," Journal of Social and Development Sciences, AMH International, vol. 12(4), pages 16-38.
    4. Kamal Abubker Abrahim Sleiman & Wang Jin & Lan Juanli & Hong Zhen Lei & Jingyi Cheng & Yuanxin Ouyang & Wenge Rong, 2022. "The Factors of Continuance Intention to Use Mobile Payments in Sudan," SAGE Open, , vol. 12(3), pages 21582440221, August.

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