DocumentCode
3388578
Title
The Missing Piece: Human-Driven Design and Research in ICT and Development
Author
Braund, P. ; Schwittay, Anke
Author_Institution
Res. Innovation Organizations Societies Inst., Berkeley, CA
fYear
2006
fDate
25-26 May 2006
Firstpage
2
Lastpage
10
Abstract
ICTD projects are usually driven along the three axes of technological innovation, development programs or new market creation. These drivers have to be complemented by a focus on the people served by ICT, and their needs. In this paper, we argue for the importance of human-driven design and research (HDDR) to take into account the four human dimensions of ICT: local practices; participatory design processes; socio-cultural contexts, and political conditions. Building on our ethnographic and design research on the LINCOS project in Costa Rica and Hewlett-Packard´s e-Inclusion program, we show how Lincos´ success was impeded by its inattention to human design features, the deployment of a neoliberal discourse of community appropriation, and the market-driven focus of e-Inclusion. We conclude by situating ICTD in the larger context of human development, and with reflections on what constitutes sustainable, successful ICTD projects
Keywords
human factors; user interfaces; Hewlett-Packard; ICT development; LINCOS project; e-Inclusion program; ethnographic; human factors; human-driven design; human-driven research; social issues; user interfaces; Communities; Design methodology; Humans; Internet; Process design; Technological innovation; IT for developing regions; design methodology; human factors; social issues; user interfaces;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Information and Communication Technologies and Development, 2006. ICTD '06. International Conference on
Conference_Location
Berkeley, CA
Print_ISBN
1-4244-0484-3
Electronic_ISBN
1-4244-0485-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICTD.2006.301830
Filename
4085506
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