Employment and Job Training

Dial "A" for Agriculture: A Review of Information and Communication Technologies for Agricultural Extension in Developing Countries

Posted by EKStallings on Oct 04, 2011
Dial "A" for Agriculture: A Review of Information and Communication Technologies for Agricultural Extension in Developing Countries data sheet 1711 Views
Author: 
Jenny C. Aker
Publication Date: 
Mar 2011
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Abstract: 

Agriculture can serve as an important engine for economic growth in developing countries, yet yields in low-income countries have lagged far behind those in developed countries for decades. One potential mechanism for increasing yields is the use of improved agricultural technologies, such as fertilizers, seeds and cropping techniques. Public-sector programs have attempted to overcome information- related barriers to technological adoption by providing agricultural extension services.

 

While such programs have been widely criticized for their limited scale, sustainability and impact, the rapid spread of mobile phone coverage in developing countries provides a unique opportunity to facilitate technological adoption via information and communication technology (ICT)-based extension programs.

 

This article outlines the potential mechanisms through which ICT could facilitate agricultural adoption and the provision of extension services in developing countries. It then reviews existing programs using ICT for agriculture, categorized by the mechanism (voice, text, internet and mobile money transfers) and the type of services provided. Finally, we identify potential constraints to such programs in terms of design and implementation, and concludes with some recommendations for implementing field-based research on the impact of these programs on farmers’ knowledge, technological adoption and welfare.


Harnessing the Mobile Revolution to Bridge the Health Education & Training Gap in Developing Countries

Posted by ccarlon on Sep 16, 2011
Harnessing the Mobile Revolution to Bridge the Health Education & Training Gap in Developing Countries data sheet 234 Views
Author: 
Callan, Paul, Robin Miller, Rumbidzai Sithole, Matt Daggett, and Daniel Altman from Dalberg Global
Publication Date: 
Jun 2011
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Abstract: 

This report for mHealthEd 2011 at the Mobile Health Summit focuses on the effectiveness of mHealth Education applications, analyzing at length the first wave of projects and the steps to be taken into consideration for further initiatives.

 

The first wave of mHealthEd applications for health workers – most introduced within the last 4 years and some of which are 7 presented in this report – include ones which enable workers to learn new treatment procedures, test their knowledge after training courses, take certification exams remotely, look up information in medical reference publications, and trade ideas on crucial diagnostic and treatment decisions. It is too early to test for impacts on health outcomes, but projects suggest that mHealthEd applications are improving the provision of care and levels of knowledge. Improved training can also increase job satisfaction and reduce attrition rates for healthcare workers.

Featured?: 
No

The World Bank

Posted by AnneryanHeatwole on Sep 06, 2011

"The World Bank is a vital source of financial and technical assistance to developing countries around the world. Our mission is to fight poverty with passion and professionalism for lasting results and to help people help themselves and their environment by providing resources, sharing knowledge, building capacity and forging partnerships in the public and private sectors.
We are not a bank in the common sense; we are made up of two unique development institutions owned by 187 member countries: the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) and the International Development Association (IDA).

Each institution plays a different but collaborative role in advancing the vision of inclusive and sustainable globalization. The IBRD aims to reduce poverty in middle-income and creditworthy poorer countries, while IDA focuses on the world's poorest countries.

Organization Type: 
Government
State/Province: 
Washington, D.C.
City: 
Washington, D.C.
Country: 
USA

Konbit: Using Mobile Tech (and Your Voice) for Local Jobs in Haiti

Posted by MelissaUlbricht on Mar 15, 2011
Konbit: Using Mobile Tech (and Your Voice) for Local Jobs in Haiti data sheet 2249 Views

Konbit is a service that aims to help communities rebuild themselves after a crisis by indexing the skill sets of local residents, allowing NGOs to find and employ them. Konbit development started after the earthquake in Haiti, and in response to complaints that NGOs were typically bringing in their own labor, rather than hiring locally. The service allows Haitians to describe their everyday skills and talents, in their own voice and language, over a mobile phone.

This audio content is then transcribed and translated into job skill categories that can be searched by NGOs and employers in the area. In this way, Konbit combines mobile and Internet technology with something more accessible to the Haitian community: their own voice.

Basic Information
Organization involved in the project?: 
Project goals: 

The goal of Konbit is to make job distribution more equitable by ensuring that Haitian nationals get jobs.

Brief description of the project: 

Konbit is a service that helps communities rebuild themselves after a crisis by indexing the skill sets of local residents, allowing NGOs to find and employ them. Konbit development started after the earthquake, in response to complaints about how NGOs were typically bringing in their own labor, rather than hiring locally. The service allows Haitians to describe their everyday skills and talents, in their own voice and language, over a mobile phone.

Target audience: 

Konbit's target audience is Haitian nationals who seek employment.

Detailed Information
Status: 
Ongoing
What worked well? : 

Konbit established a good working relationship with local mobile operator Digicel Haiti. The team also relied on a platform and approach that is familiar to the target audience: basic mobile phone and voice.

What did not work? What were the challenges?: 

Translation is taking longer than expected. Actual job placement has yet to happen. Forming relationships with NGOs and local job providers has been a challenge for Konbit.


The Information and Communication Technology Revolution: Are We Facing a New Development Era For and In Africa?

Posted by MarkWeingarten on Mar 09, 2011
The Information and Communication Technology Revolution: Are We Facing a New Development Era For and In Africa? data sheet 1973 Views
Author: 
de Bruij, Mirjam
Publication Date: 
Nov 2009
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Abstract: 

In NGO circles today there is a great deal of hope about economic growth in developing countries and the development of an information society as a result of the growing presence of technological possibilities in communication. At first sight, African cities (and the countryside now too) seem to be flooded with different ICT possibilities that are expected to bring ‘development’. Studies in ICT development have indeed shown some social change: economic development is visible in local markets, youth are increasingly being connected and there are possibilities for social relating that were never there before.

Societies in Africa that were very mobile of old are now integrating these changes in specific ways. This may result in these societies joining the world at large but it might also lead to Africans becoming part of the so-called Fourth World (Castells), a world disconnected from others and experiencing new inequalities but without a specific geographical location. The changes in communication technology are transforming societies both in the North and in the South and are blurring the divisions between the two.

Thinking on technology and society has gone far beyond the technological determinism that often informs discourses in development circles. The mobile phone has become a symbol of the new communication era and is challenging societies and creating new forms of relating between the North and the South. This paper uses the mobile phone and its introduction in Africa as an example of how the new wave of ICT is leading to cultural, social and economic dynamics that could take societies in unexpected directions that may not, as such, open up society but instead close part of it off.


Futures of Technology in Africa

Posted by MarkWeingarten on Mar 09, 2011
Futures of Technology in Africa data sheet 2087 Views
Author: 
Grosskurth, Jasper
Publication Date: 
Jan 2010
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Abstract: 

Technology holds many promises as a driver of positive changes, as a tool to address the problems and as an enabler to fulfil the potential. Economic development requires modern technology and technology plays an important role in most strategies for alleviating hunger and poverty. Technology can reduce transaction costs, save lives, facilitate education, strengthen entrepreneurship, provide access to markets and help to deliver basic services, ranging from water and sanitation to public administration. However, the same technology can also be destructive and a cause of problems. Some technological developments can be facilitated or managed, others happen and require an adequate response.

It is this manifold interrelation of technology with its environment that makes exploring the future of technology so interesting and valuable. There is a need to explore how technology in Africa will or might evolve; to discuss the drivers and the obstacles, the issues technology might resolve and the problems it might cause; to identify how technology changes society and how African societies might change global technology. These are big and complex questions and the STT foresight project, which ends with this publication, is a contribution to this discussion that is still in its infancy with respect to Africa.


Information Economy Report 2010: ICTs, Enterprises and Poverty Alleviation

Posted by MarkWeingarten on Mar 09, 2011
Information Economy Report 2010: ICTs, Enterprises and Poverty Alleviation data sheet 1615 Views
Author: 
Fredriksson, Torbjörn, Cécile Barayre, Scarlett Fondeur Gil, Diana Korka, Rémi Lang, Anvar Nigmatov, Malorie Schaus, Mongi Hamdi, and Anne Miroux
ISSN/ISBN Number: 
2075
Publication Date: 
Jan 2010
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Abstract: 

The world is witnessing a new dawn with regard to the potential of information and communication technologies (ICTs) to contribute in the fight against poverty. For the first time, there are now realistic opportunities for inhabitants of remote locations in low-income countries to get connected via ICTs. Farmers, fishermen as well as entrepreneurs in urban areas are rapidly adopting mobile phones as a key tool to advance their commercial activities, and some poor people are finding new livelihoods on the back of this trend. Against this background, the Information Economy Report 2010 focuses on the nexus of ICTs, enterprises and poverty alleviation. Whereas the knowledge base needs to grow considerably, the evidence presented in this Report suggests that more attention should be given by policymakers and other stakeholders to this new set of opportunities.

The Report is organized into five chapters. Chapter I introduces a conceptual framework for the analysis that follows. Chapter II reviews recent connectivity and affordability trends to gauge the degree of access and uptake of different ICTs among the poor. Chapter III turns to the role of the poor in the production of ICT goods and services (the ICT sector). In chapter IV, the focus shifts to the use of ICT by enterprises, with emphasis on those that matter most for poor people, namely small and micro-enterprises in urban and rural areas. Finally, chapter V presents the main policy implications from the analysis.


Technology and the Rise of the African Entrepreneur

Posted by MarkWeingarten on Mar 07, 2011
Technology and the Rise of the African Entrepreneur data sheet 1396 Views
Author: 
White, Ben
Publication Date: 
Dec 2010
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Abstract: 

Recently the World Bank reported that 43 per cent of sub-Saharan Africa’s population is between the ages of 0 and 14. That African countries will likely face an increase in job creation pressure is an understatement. Put more simply by the New Vision in Uganda, we are essentially looking at a ticking time bomb. But it would be short-sighted to lump Africa’s youth as part of a growing problem. If anything, this young African generation is part of a new process that breaks down historical barriers and harnesses a new potential to drive solutions.

With every passing minute thousands upon thousands of young people gain access to mobile phones and the Internet. Imagine starting in primary school where you had to share a five year old text book with three other students to ten years later getting instant access to the worlds combined intelligence? These individuals are eager to connect, establish new contacts, exchange information and quite simply learn at a faster rate then ever before possible. Africa now represents the second fastest growing region for the worlds largest social utility Facebook, Asia being the first. Africa’s youth are addicted to information and they guarantee a frightening leap into the information age.


Women & Mobile - A Global Opportunity: A Study on the Mobile Phone Gender Gap in Low and Middle-income Countries

Posted by MarkWeingarten on Feb 21, 2011
Women & Mobile - A Global Opportunity: A Study on the Mobile Phone Gender Gap in Low and Middle-income Countries data sheet 2269 Views
Author: 
GSMA Development Fund
Publication Date: 
Jan 2010
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Abstract: 

Mobile Phone ownership in low and middle-income countries has skyrocketed in the past several years. But a woman is still 21% less likely to own a mobile phone than a man. This figure increases to 23% if she lives in Africa, and 37% if she lives in South Asia. Closing this gender gap would bring the benefit of mobile phones to an additional 300 million women. By extending the benefits of mobile phone ownership to women, a host of social and economic goals can be advanced.

Mobile phone ownership provides distinct benefits to women, including improved access to educational, health, business and employment opportunities. Women surveyed across low and middle-incoome countries on three continents believe that a mobile phone helps them lead a more secure, connected and productive life.


Mobile-based Livelihood Services in Africa: Pilots and Early Deployments

Posted by MarkWeingarten on Jan 14, 2011
Mobile-based Livelihood Services in Africa: Pilots and Early Deployments data sheet 1779 Views
Author: 
Donner, Jonathan
Publication Date: 
Feb 2010
Publication Type: 
Journal article
Abstract: 

The paper describes a collection of initiatives delivering support via mobile phones to small enterprises, small farms, and the self-employed. Using a review of 26 examples of such services currently operational in Africa, the analysis identifies five functions of mobile livelihood services: Mediated Agricultural Extension, Market Information, Virtual Marketplaces, Financial Services, and Direct Livelihood Support. It discusses the current reliance of such systems on the SMS channel, and considers their role in supporting vs. transforming existing market structures.


Examining the Viability of Mixed Framework for Evaluating Mobile Services Impact in Rural India

Posted by MarkWeingarten on Jan 13, 2011
Examining the Viability of Mixed Framework for Evaluating Mobile Services Impact in Rural India data sheet 1309 Views
Author: 
Rao, Kasina V., Krithi Ramamritham, and R. M. Sonar
Publication Date: 
Dec 2010
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Abstract: 

This paper examines the proposed framework for evaluating the impact of the intervention of mobile-based services on socio-economic development of Indian rural areas. Framework suitability has been studied using case study method with pilot test data. Existing literature shows multiple ways of studying mobile impact through different frameworks. The need for uniform framework is the felt need as various user-centric mobile services launched across rural markets. India becomes a field testing ground for most of the multinational firms who want to test their innovative business models. This framework provides a testing method for socioeconomic development impact on rural areas. This study adopted socio economic criteria (SEC) used by Indian marketers as basis for sample selection. The pilot study clearly shown that field is ready to test the proposed framework.


Innovative ways of appropriating mobile telephony in Africa

Posted by Agata on Oct 14, 2010
Innovative ways of appropriating mobile telephony in Africa data sheet 2985 Views
Author: 
Annie Chéneau-Loquay
Publication Date: 
Sep 2010
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Abstract: 

The report entitled  "Innovative ways of appropriating mobile telephony in Africa" is published by the French Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs and the International Telecommunication Union (ITU).

The democratization of mobile telephony in Africa, its availability, ease of use and, above all, the extent to which it has been appropriated by the public, have made it a major success story. Very low-income populations are not only actively demanding access to mobile telephone services but also innovating by creating the functions and applications they can use. Development is thus happening “from the bottom up” and an entire economy, both formal and informal in nature, has come into being to meet people’s needs. Many different actors – private, public, NGOs – are now mobilized.

Operators and manufacturers have successfully changed their economic model and adapted their products and applications to allow access to services at affordable prices. NGOs have in addition created a range of messaging- based services in different sectors. However, the future evolution of mobile telephony is not clear. A range of different approaches will co-exist, from SMS up to full Internet capacity, including experimental initiatives using smart phones and “netbooks”. Falling costs will lead to an increase in the number of phone devices with data receiving capacity.

Individuals and companies involved in creating services or applications for development will need to take account of their users’ demographics and incomes, as well as the pricing systems of telecommunication companies in countries where they wish to operate. In this, states and regulating authorities have grasped the crucial role which they must play in promoting an investment-friendly environment with the goal of achieving universal access and stimulating innovation – key factors in achieving a “critical mass” of users.

The advent on the African continent of high-capacity links via submarine cables will change the ground rules and force operators to seek new sources of revenue. The inventiveness that has already been evident in mobile voice telephony will be needed once again if the “mobile divide” (in terms of costs, power supply, and so on) is not to widen.

This report takes stock of developments in this sector, which is crucial to Africa’s economic development, and suggests a number of possible directions it might take.


Mobile Phones and Economic Development in Africa

Posted by MohiniBhavsar on Oct 06, 2010
Mobile Phones and Economic Development in Africa data sheet 2944 Views
Author: 
Jenny C. Aker and Isaac M. Mbiti
Publication Date: 
Jun 2010
Publication Type: 
Journal article
Abstract: 

We examine the growth of mobile phone technology over the past decade and consider its potential impacts upon quality of life in low-income countries, with a particular focus on sub-Saharan Africa. We first provide an overview of the patterns and determinants of mobile phone coverage in sub-Saharan Africa before describing the characteristics of primary and secondary mobile phone adopters on the continent.

We then discuss the channels through which mobile phone technology can impact development outcomes, both as a positive externality of the communication sector and as part of mobile phone-based development projects, and analyze existing evidence.

While current research suggests that mobile phone coverage and adoption have had positive impacts on agricultural and labor market efficiency and welfare in certain countries, empirical evidence is still somewhat limited. In addition, mobile phone technology cannot serve as the “silver bullet” for development in sub-Saharan Africa. Careful impact evaluations of mobile phone development projects are required to better understand their impacts upon economic and social outcomes, and mobile phone technology must work in partnership with other public good provision and investment.


KickStart

Posted by MelissaUlbricht on Oct 06, 2010

KickStart’s mission is to help millions of people out of poverty. The organization promotes sustainable economic growth and employment creation in Kenya and other countries. It develops and promotes technologies that can be used by dynamic entrepreneurs to establish and run profitable small scale enterprises.

Organization Type: 
Commercial
Address: 
P.O. Box 64142
State/Province: 
Kenya
City: 
Nairobi
Country: 
Kenya
Postal code: 
620

Learning Communities Enabled by Mobile Tech: Case Study of School-Based, In-Service Secondary Teacher Training Rural Bangladesh

Posted by MohiniBhavsar on Oct 01, 2010
Learning Communities Enabled by Mobile Tech: Case Study of School-Based, In-Service Secondary Teacher Training Rural Bangladesh data sheet 1940 Views
Author: 
Sarah Lucas Pouezevara and Rubina Khan
Publication Date: 
Dec 2007
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Abstract: 

Adapted from Executive Summary: With the aim of providing developing member countries (DMCs) with better guidance to use information and communication technology (ICT) effectively in education, the Asian
Development Bank (ADB) funded a 21-month regional technical assistance (RETA) in Bangladesh, Nepal, Mongolia, and Samoa. The RETA researched approaches to using ICT in education in ways that succeed in improving teaching and learning and also are sustainable given the region’s development challenges.

The study in Bangladesh, part of the e-Teacher Training component, complements the existing ADB-funded Teaching Quality Improvement in Secondary Education Project (TQI-SEP;2005–2011), which has as one of its objectives, to provide in-service professional development to all serving teachers working in secondary schools recognized by the Ministry of Education (MoE) at least once during the project period. 

The study equipped two subject trainers, a training coordinator, and a cluster of 10 schools with “smartphones”2 (with video, speakerphone, and three-way calling capabilities), for use by 20 Bangla and math teachers in 10 schools of the Barisal region in southern Bangladesh. The existing training curriculum was revised from a 2-week, face-to-face workshop to a 6-week distance-mode training based on printed materials and practical application of training content with peers. The phones were intended primarily to enhance communication, motivation, and multimedia delivery.

The objective of the study was to develop a case study on the use of mobile connectivity in support of distance education and to determine whether:

• it is an effective mode for teacher training and improvement in classroom practice
• it is a suitable mode to reach rural and remote teachers, including women and disadvantaged groups
• it presents other benefits in terms of education administration (including student assessment and costs) and pedagogy.

The study also sought to determine the costs of this model, and the features of the smartphones that would be most useful as a support to distance learning.


Barriers and Gaps Affecting mHealth in Low and Middle Income Countries: Policy White Paper

Posted by MohiniBhavsar on Aug 20, 2010
Barriers and Gaps Affecting mHealth in Low and Middle Income Countries: Policy White Paper data sheet 2381 Views
Author: 
Mechael, P., Batavia, H., Kaonga, N., Searle, S., Kwan, A., Goldberger, A., Fu, L., Ossman, J.
Publication Date: 
May 2010
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Abstract: 

This White Paper, written by a team of researchers at the Center for Global Health and Economic Development at the Earth Institute, Columbia University, examines and synthesizes the existing mHealth literature to assess the current state of mHealth knowledge, evaluate the impact of mHealth implementations in LMICs and to examine programming, policy and research-related barriers to and gaps in mHealth scale and sustainability.

The paper is divided into two main sections. The first section reviews and summarizes the peer-reviewed literature on mHealth initiatives (focus on LMICS) to highlight trends and challenges. The second section examines the existing mHealth policy environment, barriers and gaps, and key drivers needed for an enabling policy environment.

The major thematic areas include:

  • Treatment Compliance
  • Data Collection and Disease Surveillance
  • Health Information Systems and Point of Care Support
  • Health Promotion and Disease Prevention
  • Emergency Medical Response

The review identified significant gaps in mHealth knowledge stemming from the limited scale and scope of mHealth implementation and evaluation, a policy environment that does not link health objectives and related metrics to available mHealth tools and systems, and little investment in cost-benefit studies to assess mHealth value and health outcomes research to assess success factors and weed out poor investments.

 

 

 


Mobile Research at Your Desk - No RSVP required!

Posted by MohiniBhavsar on Jul 25, 2010

At MobileActive, we’ve held a bi-weekly Research Ignite series to keep up with the latest in research related to mobiles for development. For the past few weeks, our team has been learning and discussing new research and reports. We invite you to put on your learning caps and plug into our screencasts, where we will feature some exciting developments in the world of m4d.

For this Ignite, we’re featuring three studies that were presented at the 28th ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. The research covers mobile games in rural India and China that address literacy, and a study on mobile Internet use in South Africa.

 

mGames for Literacy and Mobile Internet - Research Ignite #1 from MobileActive.org on Vimeo.

Practice Chinese Strokes and Learn Characters

Researchers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, University of California, Carnegie Mellon University and Nokia Research Palo Alto developed two mobile games, Multimedia Word and Drumming Stroke, which aim to help young children in rural China recognize Chinese characters and practice strokes. It is the first known m-game that leverages a mobile learning tool for the Chinese language.

A Mobile Marakothi, a Traditional Children’s Game in India, that Teaches English

In rural India, empirical studies show that children often miss school largely due to family labor, assisting in domestic work at home or in the farm without wages or as hired labor. The authors believe that “Mobile learning can empower poor children to balance their educational and income earning goals,” and so, pursued the development of a mobile game to teach English vocabulary. Mobile phones with the m-game were deployed to children living in rural Uttar Pradesh, India for 26 weeks. The pilot identified opportunities for out-of-school learning, revealed gender influences on m-game usage and surprisingly, showed that m-games traversed caste and village boundaries and facilitated social interaction.

Presentation starts at 4:03 min.

Challenging Assumptions of Mobile Internet Access: The Experience of Women in A Township in South Africa

More and more mobile users are surfing the internet on their phones. For most people in developing countries, there is no plan B – in other words, no PC-based internet access. This study reports the experience of a group of women in Khayelitsha, in Cape Town, South Africa who connected to a mobile-based internet for the first time. In this article, six challenges facing mobile-only internet users in developing countries are identified. The authors propose how to the mobile industry can move forward by keeping the end-users in mind and introduce the concept of “digital divide” that is secondary to mobile access – it’s “after-access”.

Presentation starts at 9:59 min.

Thank you to the authors for providing permission to use images, screenshots and data as well as helpful feedback for the screencast. For more research, reports, and white papers about mobile technology for social change visit our mdirectory.

Mobile Research at Your Desk - No RSVP required! data sheet 4877 Views
Countries: China India South Africa

Beware the Foreign Expert; Or Why Coded In Country and Local Tech Capacity is the Way to Go

Posted by nlesh on Jul 13, 2010

This guest post is written by Neal Lesh of D-Tree International, and was originally published on the Open Mobile Consortium blog.  MobileActive.org is a founding member of the Open Mobile Consortium. The article is reposted here with Neal's permission.

As fair warning, this post is part rant, part confession, part promotion (see links below!), and part call to action for increased investment in local innovation in low- and middle-income countries.

I spend a good deal of my time raising money, working on budgets, and generally championing open source software designed to be used by health workers in low-income countries.   Most of this ‘eHealth’ software ends up being developed by extremely talented and dedicated software developers from the United States and other wealthy countries. I spend a relatively small portion of my time trying support and strengthen local software development capacity. 

For example, we’re working with a small, all Tanzanian innovation company called ITIDO.  While equally talented and motivated, ITIDO’s staff has less training and, consequently, less expertise than those of the organizations I’m affiliated with. However, it’s hard to shake the feeling that in the long run, Tanzania needs successful ITIDOs more than it needs organizations I’ve helped create.  It seems that a well-functioning ITIDO is more likely to build lasting, relevant, solutions that will actually be used in Tanzania.  

A key challenge is time. We often feel the need to deliver results in a few months.  And, indeed, there is no time to waste in developing and deploying technologies that have the potential to improve desperately needed healthcare.  Given limited funds and the need to deliver quickly, the most efficient approach is almost always to go with highly experienced software developers.  And this becomes more and more true once you start building software with one group of experts.  The people who know the current software best are the ones who can most quickly extend it.  Capacity building takes time.

One approach we advocate is establishing a “Coded in Country” (CIC) label for software, akin to a Fair Trade label for projects. There is ongoing discussion about the best definition of CIC, and if there should be an official certification process, but the original idea was that a software application or module is CIC if at least half of the money goes into local development. CIC nodes will provide capacity strengthening and opportunities for international exposure to talented local developers. The idea has generated a good deal of enthusiasm from many groups, especially those deploying eHealth software for use in Sub-Saharan countries in Africa. 

CIC and other related topics will be discussed during an online panel hosted by GHDonline on the topic of local development of global eHealth software from July 19-30 (sign up now!)

After Access - Challenges Facing Mobile-only Internet Users in the Developing World

Posted by MohiniBhavsar on Jul 06, 2010
After Access - Challenges Facing Mobile-only Internet Users in the Developing World data sheet 2502 Views
Author: 
Gitau, Shikoh, Marsden, Gary, & Donner, Jonathan
Publication Date: 
Apr 2010
Publication Type: 
Journal article
Abstract: 

This study reports results of an ethnographic action research study, exploring mobile-centric internet use. Over the course of 13 weeks, eight women, each a member of a livelihoods collective in urban Cape Town, South Africa, received training to make use of the data (internet) features on the phones they already owned. None of the women had previous exposure to PCs or the internet. Activities focused on social networking, entertainment, information search, and, in particular, job searches. Results of the exercise reveal both the promise of, and barriers to, mobile internet use by a potentially large community of first-time, mobilecentric users. Discussion focuses on the importance of selfexpression and identity management in the refinement of online and offline presences, and considers these forces relative to issues of gender and socioeconomic status.


BabaJob: Bringing Jobs to People at the Bottom of the Pyramid

Posted by AnneryanHeatwole on Jun 28, 2010
BabaJob: Bringing Jobs to People at the Bottom of the Pyramid data sheet 4641 Views

Finding a job is hard but in India, BabaJob is making the process a bit easier for job seekers at the bottom of the pyramid.

Started in Bangalore in March of 2007, BabaJob is a matching resource for blue-collar workers looking for jobs. Sean Blagsvedt, co-founder of BabaJob, explains that the inspiration came from Anirudh Krishna’s research paper “Escaping Poverty and Becoming Poor: Who Gains, Who Loses, and Why?” Blagsvedt learned that most people moved out of poverty through job diversification. However, he noticed that most job-finding resources in India were designed for people seeking white collar jobs. Blue-collar workers and those at the bottom of the economic pyramid had to rely on word of mouth or luck in order to find the jobs that could help them move out of poverty. He decided to create a resource that would allow workers in India to find jobs in their fields and born was Babajob.

Basic Information
Organization involved in the project?: 
Project goals: 

The goal of BabaJob is to create a job-finding resource for blue-collar workers in India. The company allows users to sign up via mobile or the web, and find jobs in their industry based on proximity, salary, and type of work. Information is accessible for job seekers via mobile. The goal is to help workers at the bottom of the pyramid move out of poverty by providing job diversification. 

Brief description of the project: 

Babajob is a job-finding service that works over mobile phones and as a website. The company helps blue collar workers find new jobs by pairing them with employers who are seeking new employees. 

Target audience: 

The target audience is blue-collar workers in India who are seeking new jobs. 

Detailed Information
Length of Project (in months) : 
24
Status: 
Ongoing
What worked well? : 

Several things that went well:

  • Scaling the project; although Babajob started in Bangalore, it has scaled to be a fully national program and is now expanding to Indonesia
  • Large pick-up among user; more than 80,000 job seekers have used the site and nearly 400,000 jobs have been posted
  • Pairing with telecommunications companies allowed the organization to reach new clients over mobiles
What did not work? What were the challenges?: 

Some challenges:

  • BabaJob was originally designed to work in tandem with the BabaLife social network. The group decided that the job search site was more useful than the social network once other social networks began to become popular.
  • The company focused more on web-based visitors originally, but realized that scaling would be easier through mobile.

 


Editacuja

Posted by mrestrepo on Dec 18, 2009

Editacuja is a Brazilian startup focused in knowledge management and contend development services for education, training and culture.

Integrate emerging technologies to provide innovative solutions to companies, universities and schools, enabling cross border iniciatives with high ROI

Works with a multi-media approach, enabling mobile, press, audiovisual and web media services and products.

With a multi-disciplinary team, Editacuja adds value and knowledge for projects that can educate and relate.

Editacuja Integrate Technologies

  • Mobile 2.0 based learning
  • Web 2.0 and social based learning
  • Artificial and collective intelligence
  • Immersive Learning
  • Augmented Reality
  • Simulations

 

 

 

 

Organization Type: 
Educational
Address: 
Rua Aimberé, 2090 - 42
State/Province: 
SP
City: 
São Paulo
Country: 
Brazil
Postal code: 
1258020

Scenes from Amman: Mobile Data for Social Action in the Middle East

Posted by AnneryanHeatwole on Dec 09, 2009

"Innovations in Mobile Data Collection for Social Action," a workshop co-hosted by MobileActive.org and UNICEF in Amman, Jordan, featured Ignite Talks -- five minute presentations by inspiring people who are using mobiles for social action in the Middle East -- and interviews with key participants.  Jacob Korenblum describes the work of Souktel in Palestine, and Erica Kochi from UNICEF Innovation, the co-host of the event, illustrates why data collected by mobiles is so important for their work in Iraq. 

A Cleaner, Safer Way to Cook (tracked with Mobile Tech)

Posted by admin on Oct 28, 2009

Cross-posted by permission. Written by Michael Benedict.

Suraj Wahab is passionate about cookstoves. Indeed, efficient charcoal burning stoves like those made by his company, Toyola Energy Limited, offer a lot to be passionate about.

For hundreds of thousands of families in Ghana who cook using traditional methods, these simple metal and clay devices provide a cleaner, safer, more efficient way to prepare their daily meals, while also reducing greenhouse gas emissions and deforestation. The stoves are sold in markets and door-to-door by Toyola “evangelists”, individuals who record each sale in a notebook and then are paid on commission. With 50,000 stoves projected to be sold this year and double that possible in 2010, the paper records are becoming increasingly difficult to maintain.

Tracking the Introduction of the Village Phone Product in Rwanda

Posted by AnneryanHeatwole on Oct 23, 2009
Tracking the Introduction of the Village Phone Product in Rwanda data sheet 2942 Views
Author: 
Michael Douglas Futch, Craig Thomas McIntosh
Publication Date: 
Sep 2009
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Abstract: 

This paper presents the results from a quantitative impact study of the Grameen/MTN Village Phone in Rwanda, which was conducted between June 2006 and August 2007. We find that the introduction of a Village Phone had a substantial impact on reported access to telecommunications for local entrepreneurs.

While the introduction of phones did not follow the intended randomized design, we compare the changes observed in 94 study communities that received the phones to the 284 that did not. We find that the placement of a Village Phone in a community was associated with both an increased use of phones to transmit news and a greater propensity for farmers to arrange their own transit.

Despite this improvement in access to telephony, the actual prices received by farmers were not affected. Impacts at the household level were muted by the relatively small size of Village Phone businesses and airtime usage rates, implying that profits must be transferred from other sources to pay off the phone in six months. Reported labor time in household enterprise increased dramatically for Village Phone operators, but positive impacts on consumption or overall business profits were not found.