Mobile communication has become a common phenomenon in most parts of the world. There are indeed more mobile subscriptions than there are people who use the internet. For many people outside of the metropolitan areas of Europe and North America, this is literally their first use of electronically mediated interaction. This preface to the special issue of New Media & Society examines mobile communication in a global context. Through an overview of eight articles situated in the global south, we describe how mobile communication sheds light upon notions of information, appropriation and development and how it is challenging, and in many cases changing, notions of gender. While the mobile phone reshapes development and micro dynamics of ge...
The mobile phone has become part of the changing history of communication cultures in Africa. Instea...
The mobile phone has achieved a global presence faster than any other form of information and commun...
This chapter examines the emergence of the mobile phone and its consequences for research in the sub...
Mobile communication has become a common phenomenon in most parts of the world. There are indeed mor...
This introduction presents an overview of the key concepts discussed in the subsequent chapters of t...
This century has been marked by the rapid and divergent uptake of mobile telephony throughout the wo...
Convergence has become part of burgeoning mobile media. Whether we like it or not the mobile phone h...
The rapid uptake of mobile phones in the global South—that is, developing countries located primaril...
Co-published with the Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, Nanyang Technological Uni...
Mobile phones have proliferated remarkably in developing countries. It is argued that mobile phones ...
This article addresses the need to build sustainable, appropriate and authentic foundations for lear...
Plus ça change! Since the ªrst Harvard Forum in 2003, much has changed in information technology, es...
Since the 1997 financial crisis in the Asia-Pacific, countries in the region have sought to rebuild ...
Access to cellular phones as a primary communication device has wetted the appetite of most people b...
The adoption of modern information and communication technologies has been predicted to have a drama...
The mobile phone has become part of the changing history of communication cultures in Africa. Instea...
The mobile phone has achieved a global presence faster than any other form of information and commun...
This chapter examines the emergence of the mobile phone and its consequences for research in the sub...
Mobile communication has become a common phenomenon in most parts of the world. There are indeed mor...
This introduction presents an overview of the key concepts discussed in the subsequent chapters of t...
This century has been marked by the rapid and divergent uptake of mobile telephony throughout the wo...
Convergence has become part of burgeoning mobile media. Whether we like it or not the mobile phone h...
The rapid uptake of mobile phones in the global South—that is, developing countries located primaril...
Co-published with the Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, Nanyang Technological Uni...
Mobile phones have proliferated remarkably in developing countries. It is argued that mobile phones ...
This article addresses the need to build sustainable, appropriate and authentic foundations for lear...
Plus ça change! Since the ªrst Harvard Forum in 2003, much has changed in information technology, es...
Since the 1997 financial crisis in the Asia-Pacific, countries in the region have sought to rebuild ...
Access to cellular phones as a primary communication device has wetted the appetite of most people b...
The adoption of modern information and communication technologies has been predicted to have a drama...
The mobile phone has become part of the changing history of communication cultures in Africa. Instea...
The mobile phone has achieved a global presence faster than any other form of information and commun...
This chapter examines the emergence of the mobile phone and its consequences for research in the sub...