The rapid uptake of mobile phones in the global South—that is, developing countries located primarily in the Southern Hemisphere—is a fact that is often repeated in popular discourse as well as academic research. In the years since it became a favorite factoid, there have been shifts in some of the most well-known patterns of use, with new data being created and collected. To a large extent, communication and information researchers have yet to fully address the opportunities and challenges regarding these changes. This chapter outlines some of the shifts in usage trends, what kinds of data they generate, and what kinds of questions they can help answer about social and economic ties, mobility and location, and innovation and design. These ...
Doctoral Degree. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban.Mobile phone access has grown exponentially, tr...
This study reports results of an ethnographic action research study, exploring mobile-centric intern...
Against the backdrop of alleged mobile phone ubiquity and the enthusiasm about the developmental val...
Mobile phone ubiquity in much of the developing world has turned from a question of when rather than...
Mobile communication has become a common phenomenon in most parts of the world. There are indeed mor...
Drawing on published material, gray literature, and personal research, this article explores the imp...
Mobile communication has become a common phenomenon in most parts of the world. There are indeed mor...
In recent years, the rise of information and communication technologies (ICTs) contrasted with the d...
Research questions This research was focused on exploring the impact of communication technologies o...
As mobile phones reach the remote corners of the world, they bring with them a sense of great optimi...
Growth in mobile phone access and ownership presents an opportunity to collect more data, more fre...
The rapid adoption of mobile phones, particularly in developing countries, has led a number of resea...
The aim of this study is to assess the impact of mobile phone proliferation on productivity, using d...
Using an ethnographic action research approach, the study explores the challenges, practices, and em...
Daily activity sees data constantly flowing through cameras, the internet, satellites, radio frequen...
Doctoral Degree. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban.Mobile phone access has grown exponentially, tr...
This study reports results of an ethnographic action research study, exploring mobile-centric intern...
Against the backdrop of alleged mobile phone ubiquity and the enthusiasm about the developmental val...
Mobile phone ubiquity in much of the developing world has turned from a question of when rather than...
Mobile communication has become a common phenomenon in most parts of the world. There are indeed mor...
Drawing on published material, gray literature, and personal research, this article explores the imp...
Mobile communication has become a common phenomenon in most parts of the world. There are indeed mor...
In recent years, the rise of information and communication technologies (ICTs) contrasted with the d...
Research questions This research was focused on exploring the impact of communication technologies o...
As mobile phones reach the remote corners of the world, they bring with them a sense of great optimi...
Growth in mobile phone access and ownership presents an opportunity to collect more data, more fre...
The rapid adoption of mobile phones, particularly in developing countries, has led a number of resea...
The aim of this study is to assess the impact of mobile phone proliferation on productivity, using d...
Using an ethnographic action research approach, the study explores the challenges, practices, and em...
Daily activity sees data constantly flowing through cameras, the internet, satellites, radio frequen...
Doctoral Degree. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban.Mobile phone access has grown exponentially, tr...
This study reports results of an ethnographic action research study, exploring mobile-centric intern...
Against the backdrop of alleged mobile phone ubiquity and the enthusiasm about the developmental val...