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Journal ArticleDOI

‘Rural Informatics’: Use of Information and Communication Technologies for the Rural Poor – From Digital Divide to Digital Opportunity in Rural India

Rajesh Kumar
- Vol. 39, Iss: 4, pp 183-190
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TLDR
In this article, an attempt to analyse the ICT policy for the rural poor people in India and discuss evolving an integrated approach for participatory rural development where the participation of the local community and an inclusion of a traditional knowledge system is taken.
Abstract
ICT has great potential to bring in the desired social transformations by enhancing access to people, services, information and other technologies. ICT applications can enhance poor people’s opportunities by improving their access to markets, health and education. India is striving to come up with innovative ICT support for the rural community. Creation of affordable ICT facilities and investment in training to maintain and expand computer networks in rural areas is on policy agenda of the government. However, incorporation of ICT in a national development agenda must involve public and private sector together with the local community for effective creation, expansion and diffusion of ICT applications and also for better e-governance. This article is an attempt to analyse the ICT policy for the rural poor people in India and discuss evolving an integrated approach for participatory rural development where the participation of the local community and an inclusion of a traditional knowledge system is taken ...

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Citations
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Enabling Sustainable Broadband Adoption in Rural Areas: A Case Study of Information Network Villages in South Korea

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined South Korea's Information Network Village (INVIL) project as an exemplary policy of sustainable broadband adoption in rural areas, which was designed to narrow the digital divide between urban and rural areas and create new sources of revenue and to build sustainable rural communities.
Journal Article

Information Network Villages

TL;DR: The Information Network Village (INVIL) project as mentioned in this paper aims to close the digital gap between urban and rural areas, to create new sources of revenues from existing industries, and to build sustainable local communities.
Book ChapterDOI

A Reconstruction of Rural Teachers' Technology Integration Experiences: Searching for Equity

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe how and why a phenomenological research approach applied to the reconstruction of rural teachers' experiences in incorporating ICTs to their practice can be helpful for both, for research purposes as well as for inspiring the avenues that rural teacher education in the digital age should follow.
References
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Book

People First: A Guide to Self-Reliant, Participatory Rural Development

Stan Burkey
TL;DR: Self-Reliant Participatory Development as mentioned in this paper is a model of self-reliance in participatory development, focusing on the training and support of change agents, and focusing on saving, credit and input.
Journal ArticleDOI

E-government maturity models: Extension of the Layne and Lee model

TL;DR: The article proposes a reorientation of the e- government maturity models by focusing IT applications to improve the core activities and bring end-users as the key stakeholders for future e-government investments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Can information and communications technology applications contribute to poverty reduction? Lessons from rural India

TL;DR: In this article, the authors outline a sample model to explain why a digital divide may exist between rich and poor, and identify the key factors that foster local ownership and the availability of content and services that respond to the most pressing needs of the poor.
Journal ArticleDOI

i‐development not e‐development: special issue on ICTs and development

TL;DR: The idea that ICTs lead to the ''death of distance'' and the ''level playing field'' in which the small and the new compete on equal terms with the large and the well-established, and permit leapfrogging to an information economy has been discussed as discussed by the authors.
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