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Engendering communication: a perspective on ICT access and usage in Africa

Anne Milek (University of Zurich, Psychological Institute, Zurich, Switzerland)
Christoph Stork (Research ICT Africa, Cape Town, South Africa)
Alison Gillwald (Research ICT Africa, Cape Town, South Africa, and the University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa)

info

ISSN: 1463-6697

Article publication date: 10 May 2011

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Abstract

Purpose

Information communication technologies (ICTs) are widely seen as having the potential to contribute positively to economic growth and development and to improve the livelihoods and quality of life of individuals and households and yet access to ICTs and usage of them remains highly inequitable. This paper aims to identify areas of inequality in access to ICTs between men and women in Africa.

Design/methodology/approach

Drawing on the Research ICT Africa (RIA) household and individual ICT survey conducted in 17 African countries between 2007/2008 the paper provides an empirical basis for assessing gender dimensions of ICT access and usage. Additionally, focus group studies were conducted in Cameroon, Ethiopia, Nigeria, South Africa and Uganda to gain a greater qualitative understanding of access to and usage of ICTs from a gender perspective.

Findings

Although the results confirmed in many countries the widely held belief that men have greater access to ICTs than women in some instances more women than men owned mobile phones such as in South Africa and Mozambique. In Cameroon women were found to have greater knowledge of the internet than their male counterparts. Most significantly perhaps is the finding that when women have similar income, education and employment status they have comparable access to ICTs as their male counterparts. However, as women generally do not have the same access to those core factors that enhance ICT access and usage, their access to ICT is generally lower.

Originality/value

The quantitative as well as focus group results of this study confirm gender differences in access to ICTs, raising important questions about the points of policy intervention to redress such imbalances.

Keywords

Citation

Milek, A., Stork, C. and Gillwald, A. (2011), "Engendering communication: a perspective on ICT access and usage in Africa", info, Vol. 13 No. 3, pp. 125-141. https://doi.org/10.1108/14636691111131493

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2011, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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