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ICT aided citizenry participation: a pragmatic adoption of mobiles phones to support voter education in Africa

The United Nation's Millennium declaration touts democracy as the pre-requisite to economic development. However, very little work has been done in the use of technology to advance democracy in developing countries and especially in Africa. On the other hand, a lot of effort has been put into place...

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Main Author: Gitau, Silvian Wanjiku
Other Authors: Marsden, Gary
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Computer Science 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Gitau, Silvian Wanjiku
author2 Marsden, Gary
author_browse Gitau, Silvian Wanjiku
Marsden, Gary
author_facet Marsden, Gary
Gitau, Silvian Wanjiku
author_sort Gitau, Silvian Wanjiku
collection Thesis
description The United Nation's Millennium declaration touts democracy as the pre-requisite to economic development. However, very little work has been done in the use of technology to advance democracy in developing countries and especially in Africa. On the other hand, a lot of effort has been put into place to bridge the digital divide in these developing countries by introduction of technologies best suited for the environment. Key among the new technologies is the mobile phone. This study outlines a project that is based on partnerships with Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) specifically working on democratic communication in Kenya and South Africa. In particular we sought to empower these NGOs by increasing their capacity in voter education through using mobile phones as a voter education tool. Voter education is a complex process that takes into account various factors such as voter demographic information, transparency, universality in reach, channel and medium of use and, most importantly, the timing has to be right. These requirements are compounded by challenges in the African context, including: lack of telecommunication infrastructure; high illiteracy; incidences of violence and vandalism mainly during an electioneering period. We introduce the Big Board, a public information system that compliments mobile phones in the dissemination of multi-media information by the elimination of connection charges by mobile service providers, whilst providing a means to provide local content in remote areas without the need for an Internet connection. A key finding at the end of this study was the importance of pragmatism when approaching the design of technology for developing world. By taking into account environmental factors we were able to engage in mutually beneficial partnerships between us as technologist NGOs. Whereas we provided a means through which mobile phones could be used for voter education, they provided us with the information on voter education and democracy as well as a means to measure the impact of this tool using their own evaluation techniques.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:52:37.129Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39357 ICT aided citizenry participation: a pragmatic adoption of mobiles phones to support voter education in Africa Gitau, Silvian Wanjiku Marsden, Gary Computer Science The United Nation's Millennium declaration touts democracy as the pre-requisite to economic development. However, very little work has been done in the use of technology to advance democracy in developing countries and especially in Africa. On the other hand, a lot of effort has been put into place to bridge the digital divide in these developing countries by introduction of technologies best suited for the environment. Key among the new technologies is the mobile phone. This study outlines a project that is based on partnerships with Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) specifically working on democratic communication in Kenya and South Africa. In particular we sought to empower these NGOs by increasing their capacity in voter education through using mobile phones as a voter education tool. Voter education is a complex process that takes into account various factors such as voter demographic information, transparency, universality in reach, channel and medium of use and, most importantly, the timing has to be right. These requirements are compounded by challenges in the African context, including: lack of telecommunication infrastructure; high illiteracy; incidences of violence and vandalism mainly during an electioneering period. We introduce the Big Board, a public information system that compliments mobile phones in the dissemination of multi-media information by the elimination of connection charges by mobile service providers, whilst providing a means to provide local content in remote areas without the need for an Internet connection. A key finding at the end of this study was the importance of pragmatism when approaching the design of technology for developing world. By taking into account environmental factors we were able to engage in mutually beneficial partnerships between us as technologist NGOs. Whereas we provided a means through which mobile phones could be used for voter education, they provided us with the information on voter education and democracy as well as a means to measure the impact of this tool using their own evaluation techniques. 2024-04-11T13:28:40Z 2024-04-11T13:28:40Z 2009 2024-04-11T13:05:12Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39357 eng application/pdf Department of Computer Science Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Computer Science
Gitau, Silvian Wanjiku
ICT aided citizenry participation: a pragmatic adoption of mobiles phones to support voter education in Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title ICT aided citizenry participation: a pragmatic adoption of mobiles phones to support voter education in Africa
title_full ICT aided citizenry participation: a pragmatic adoption of mobiles phones to support voter education in Africa
title_fullStr ICT aided citizenry participation: a pragmatic adoption of mobiles phones to support voter education in Africa
title_full_unstemmed ICT aided citizenry participation: a pragmatic adoption of mobiles phones to support voter education in Africa
title_short ICT aided citizenry participation: a pragmatic adoption of mobiles phones to support voter education in Africa
title_sort ict aided citizenry participation a pragmatic adoption of mobiles phones to support voter education in africa
topic Computer Science
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39357
work_keys_str_mv AT gitausilvianwanjiku ictaidedcitizenryparticipationapragmaticadoptionofmobilesphonestosupportvotereducationinafrica