Information revolution and developing countries
Material type:
- 9780262731782
- 303.4833 WIL
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Gandhi Smriti Library | 303.4833 WIL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 92207 |
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303.4833 THO Digital India: understanding information, communication and social change | 303.4833 THO Smarter than you think: how technology is changing our minds for the better | 303.4833 USE Uses of blogs | 303.4833 WIL Information revolution and developing countries | 303.4833091724 GAS Information communication technologies and human development: opportunities and challenges | 303.4833091724 ROY Globalisation, ICT and developing nations: challenges in the information age | 303.4833094 ICT ICTs and Indian social change: diffusion, poverty, governance |
In this book Ernest Wilson provides a clear, nuanced analysis of the major transformations resulting from the global information revolution. He shows that the information revolution is rooted in societal dynamics, political interests, and social structure. Using the innovative Strategic ReStructuring (SRS) model, he uncovers links between the big changes taking place around the world and the local initiatives of individual information activists, especially in developing countries. Indeed, Wilson shows that many of the structural changes of the information revolution, such as shifts from public to private ownership or from monopoly to competition, are driven by activists struggling individually and collectively to overcome local apathy and entrenched opposition to reform. Wilson applies his SRS model to the politics of Internet expansion in Brazil, China, and Ghana to illustrate the real-world challenges facing policy-makers and practitioners. Examples of such challenges include starting Internet companies, reforming regulatory laws, and formulating NGO strategies for dealing with the digital divide. Wilson identifies the tremendous possibilities for innovation and advancement in developing countries while acknowledging the structural, institutional, and cultural constraints that work against their realization.
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