Abstract
Information and communication technologies (ICT) have proven their value in delivering time-sensitive and relevant information to targeted communities. Information has been the key resource to social development. Social entrepreneurs have leveraged ICT to reach out to people who are marginalized from public discourse. Despite successes however, some ICT initiatives have failed due to underestimating the social requirements of technology and to relying more on information systems than on the information the system transports. How information is produced and applied to a social context to create meaning is more important than the means by which it is represented through portable monitors and mobile devices. The paper argues in order to take advantage of today’s ICT, it is critical that we understand how technology and society mediate within a socio-technical framework. Using the Actor Network Theory, the paper explains the process of mediation to highlight that the journey to technology-based solutions is not smooth. The Village Knowledge Center (VKC) project in India and the Access to Information (A2I) project in Bangladesh provide sound evidence of how ICT-led social development can be effective in the short run but meaningful long term changes will depend on the collaboration of social entrepreneurs and public administrators.
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
Keywords
References
Bhatnagar, D., Dewan, A., Torres, M., Kanungo, P.: M.S. Swaminathan Research Foundation’s Information Village Research Project (IVRP). Union Territory of Pondicherry, World Bank (2003)
Bijker, W.E., Hughes, T.P., Pinch, T.J. (eds.): The Social Construction of Technological Systems, New Directions in the Sociology and History of Technology. MIT Press, Cambridge (1987)
Callon, M.: Some Elements of a Sociology of Translation: Domestication of the scallops and the fishermen of St Brieuc Bay. In: Law, J. (ed.) Power, Action and Belief: A New Sociology of Knowledge, pp. 196–233. Routledge & Kegan Paul, London (1986)
Dacin, P.A., Dacin, M.T., Matear, M.: Social Entrepreneurship: Why We Don’t Need a New Theory and How We Move Forward From Here. Academy of Management Perspectives 24(3), 37–57 (2010), doi:10.5465/amp.2010.52842950
Dahl, R.A.: After the revolution; authority in a good society. Yale University Press, New Haven (1970)
De, R., Ratan, A.L.: Whose gain is it anyway? Structurational perspectives on deploying ICTs for development in India’s microfinance sector. Information Technology for Development 15(4), 259–282 (2009), doi:10.1002/itdj.20129
Feenberg, A.: Critical Theory of Technology. Oxford University Press, New York (1991)
Fountain, J.E.: Building the virtual state: Information technology and institutional change. The Brookings Institution, Washington (2001)
Frederickson, H.G.: The spirit of public administration. Jossey-Bass Publishers, San Francisco (1997)
Goguen, J.: Social Theory of Information. In: Bowker, G.C. (ed.) Social Science, Technical Systems, and Cooperative Work: Beyond the Great Divide, pp. 27–56. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Mahwah (1997)
Goldfinch, S.: Pessimism, Computer Failure, and Information Systems Development in the Public Sector. Public Administration Review 67(5), 917–929 (2007)
Harmon, M.M.: Public Administration’s Final Exam: A Pragmatist Restructuring of the Profession and the Discipline. University of Alabama Press (2006)
Heeks, R.: ICTs and the MDGs: On the Wrong Track? Information for Development, III(3). Retrieved from ICTs and MDGs in Wrong Track website (2005), http://www.sed.man.ac.uk/idpm/research/publications/wp/di/short/di_sp07.pdf
Heeks, R., Bhatnagar, S.: Understanding success and failure in information age reform. In: Heeks, R. (ed.) Reinventing Government in the Information Age: International Perspectives in IT-Enabled Public Sector Reform, pp. 49–74. Routledge, London (1999)
Heeks, R., Seo-zindy, R.: ICTs and Social Movements under Authoritarian Regimes: An Actor-Network Perspective. Centre for Development Informatics, Institute for Development Policy and Management, SED, Manchester, UK (2013)
Heidegger, M.: The question concerning technology, and other essays. Harper & Row, New York (1977)
Kaghan, W.N., Bowker, G.C.: Out of machine age?: complexity, sociotechnical systems and actor network theory. Journal of Engineering and Technology Management 18(3-4), 253–269 (2001), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0923-4748
King, C.S., Stivers, C., Box, R.C.: Government is us: public administration in an anti-government era. Sage Publications, Thousand Oaks (1998)
Korac-Boisvert, N., Kouzmin, A.: Transcending soft-core IT disasters in public sector organizations. Information Infrastructure and Policy 4(2), 131–161 (1995)
Latour, B.: Science in action: How to follow scientists and engineers through society. Harvard University Press, Cambridge (1987)
Latour, B.: Reassembling the social: an introduction to actor-network-theory. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2005)
Law, J.: Notes on the Theory of the Actor-Network: Ordering, Strategy and Heterogeneity. Systems Practice 5, 379–393 (1992)
Law, J., Callon, M.: The Life and Death of an Aircraft: A Network Analysis of Technical Change. In: Bijker, W.E., Law, J. (eds.) Shaping Technology/Building Society: Studies in Sociotechnical Change, pp. 21–52. MIT Press, Cambridge (1992)
MacKenzie, D.A., Wajcman, J.: The social shaping of technology. Philadelphia: Open University Press, Buckingham (1999)
Martin, R.L., Osberg, S.: Social entrepreneurship: the case for definition. Stanford Social Innovation Review 5(2), 28 (2007)
Misa, T.J., Brey, P., Feenberg, A.: Modernity and Technology. MIT Press (2003)
Nanda, S., Arunachalam, S.: Reaching the Unreached. M S Swaminathan Research Foundation, Chennai (2009)
Northrop, A., Kraemer, K.L., Dunkle, D., King, J.L.: Payoffs from Computerization: Lessons over Time. Public Administration Review 50(5), 505–514 (1990)
Rhodes, J.: Using Actor-Network Theory to Trace an ICT (Telecenter) Implementation Trajectory in an African Women’s Micro-Enterprise Development Organization. Information Technology and International Development 5(3), 1–20 (2009)
Swindell, J.: The Information Villages of Pondicherry: a case study in capacity building for sustainable development. In: Leal, W. (ed.) Innovation, Education and Communication for Sustainable Development, pp. 515–534. Peter Lang., Frankfurt (2006)
Swindell, J.: Rural empowerment through access to knowledge: a comparison of two projects on two continents. Paper Presented at the European Federation for Information Technology in Agriculture (EFITA), Glasgow, England (2007)
Thompson, J.D.: Organizations in Action: Social science bases of administrative theory. Transaction Publishers, New Brunswick (2003)
UNDP, Bangladesh: Access to Information (A2I) Evaluation (5398). Dhaka, Bangladesh: United Nations Development Programme, UNDP (2011), http://erc.undp.org/evaluationadmin/downloaddocument.html?docid=5398 (retrieved)
Vibert, F.: The rise of the unelected: democracy and the new separation of powers. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2007)
Yunus, M., Weber, K.: Building social business: the new kind of capitalism that serves humanity’s most pressing needs. Public Affairs, New York (2010)
Zukin, C., Keeter, S., Andolina, M.W., Jenkins, K., DelliCarpini, M.X.: A new engagement? Political participation, civic life, and the changing American citizen. Oxford University Press, New York (2006)
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2013 IFIP International Federation for Information Processing
About this paper
Cite this paper
Haque, A., Mantode, K.L. (2013). Governance in the Technology Era: Implications of Actor Network Theory for Social Empowerment in South Asia. In: Dwivedi, Y.K., Henriksen, H.Z., Wastell, D., De’, R. (eds) Grand Successes and Failures in IT. Public and Private Sectors. TDIT 2013. IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology, vol 402. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-38862-0_23
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-38862-0_23
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-642-38861-3
Online ISBN: 978-3-642-38862-0
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)