Evaluating Shared Access: social equality and the circulation of mobile phones in rural Uganda

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalJournal of Computer-Mediated Communication
Year Not known
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This article examines forms of shared access to technology where some privileges of ownership are retained. Sharing is defined as informal, non-remunerative resource distributing activities where multiple individuals have a relationship to a single device as purchaser, owner, possessor, operator and/or user. In the specific case of mobile phones in rural Uganda, dynamics of social policing and social obligation were mediated and concretized by these devices. Patterns of sharing mobile phones in rural Uganda led to preferential access for needy groups (such as those in ill health) while systematically and disproportionately excluding others (women in particular). The framework for sharing proposed in this article will be useful for structuring comparisons of technology adoption and access across cultural contexts.
Epistemonikos ID: 0fa52f964ffa407e2a39b45df39d24d9bdbc96da
First added on: Jan 29, 2013