000 02506cam a2200277zu 4500
001 88922105
003 FRCYB88922105
005 20250107180233.0
006 m o d
007 cr un
008 250107s2021 fr | o|||||0|0|||eng d
020 _a9789956552849
035 _aFRCYB88922105
040 _aFR-PaCSA
_ben
_c
_erda
100 1 _aKomen, Jerop
245 0 1 _aMobile Assemblages and Maendeleo in Rural Kenya
_c['Komen, Jerop']
264 1 _bLangaa RPCIG
_c2021
300 _a p.
336 _btxt
_2rdacontent
337 _bc
_2rdamdedia
338 _bc
_2rdacarrier
650 0 _a
700 0 _aKomen, Jerop
856 4 0 _2Cyberlibris
_uhttps://international.scholarvox.com/netsen/book/88922105
_qtext/html
_a
520 _aIn this book, Leah Komen explores the impact of mobile telephony on the lives of people in rural Kenya. The book analyses the outcomes of complex intersections and interactions between mobile phones, individuals, and the broader society as distinct from the traditional cause-effect relationships in the discourse of development in the changing world. It subverts the traditional notion of synchronic development that ignores target populations' involvement in decision-making and sees development from the lens of developed economies where information and communication technologies like mobile telephones have originated. Komen's analysis advances a diachronic type of development that focuses on human technology's interrelationships instead of the synchronic model that privileges technology as engendering social transformations and development. The diachronic model is fundamentally Maendeleo, a Swahili term denoting process, participation, progress, and growth, and views social transformations and development as an interaction between mobile telephony users and their specific contexts. The book argues that the mobile phone has become an increasingly personalised device. It encourages a sense of community through the sharing of the device by multiple users, promotes co-presence and interpersonal communication, enhances kinship ties and social connectedness, and creates new ways of organising and conducting everyday socioeconomic activities. However, it also can disintegrate relationships and remodel some. This is a book about power negotiation, gender relations, cultural inclinations, and socio-economic dispositions within the context of mobile telephony's domestic use to facilitate social change and development.
999 _c52240
_d52240