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E-grāmata: Gendered Power and Mobile Technology: Intersections in the Global South

Edited by (Karlstads universitet, Sweden), Edited by (University of Jyväskylä, Finland)
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Mobile phones are widely viewed as the information and communication technology that holds the most promise for bridging global digital divides.Gendered Power and Mobile Technology uses empirical research to focus on changing intersections between technology, gender and other categories of social and cultural power difference (such as age, race, class and ethnicity) in the use of mobile communication technologies. Asking how these intersections can inform development discourse, practice and research, this volume seeks to rectify the lack of attention to the global South, calling for more sensitivity to the contexts and consequences of mobile phone use. Indeed, drawing on case studies from Ecuador, Ghana, Kenya, Mexico, Peru, Tanzania and Uganda, this book engages with the intersectionality paradigm to tease out the complexities of using mobile technologies for development purposes.Gendered Power and Mobile Technology will appeal to students and researchers interested in fields such as media studies, development studies, gender and technology, feminist technoscience, anthropology and sociology.
List of contributors
ix
1 Rethinking gender and technology within intersections in the Global South
1(22)
Laura Stark
Caroline Wamala Larsson
PART I Mobile money in transacting femininities and masculinities
23(68)
2 Gender and mobile phone usage in Kenyan women's everyday lives
25(23)
Jessica Gustafsson
3 Sex, social reproduction, and mobile telephony as responses to precarity in urban Tanzania
48(22)
Laura Stark
4 Rethinking financial inclusion: social shaping of mobile money among bodaboda men in Kampala
70(21)
Caroline Wamala Larsson
PART II Mobile connectivities: negotiating age, gender, and agency
91(58)
5 One phone, two phones, four phones: older women and mobile telephony in Lima, Peru
93(15)
Mireia Fern Andez-Ar Devol
6 Redefining relations: the appropriation of new ICT by young rural women in Peru
108(17)
Mariana Barreto Avila
Andrea Garcia Abad
7 Reinforcing inequalities? Mobile telephony and HIV/AIDS in Ghana
125(24)
Perpetual Crentsil
PART III Mobile continuities at the intersection of ethnicity, class, and gender
149(48)
8 Women's tech initiatives in Uganda: doing intersectionality and feminist technoscience
151(15)
Linda Paxling
9 Digital snails? Shuar women and mobile communication in Ecuador
166(12)
Yolanda Martinez Suarez
Saleta De Salvador Agra
10 Communitarian mobile telephony services in rural Mexico: Red Celular Talea de Castro and Telecomunicaciones Indigenas Comunitarias
178(19)
Lorena Perez
Index 197
Caroline Wamala Larsson is an Associate Professor in Gender Studies and Head of Research with the Swedish Program for ICT in Developing Regions (SPIDER), an independent resource centre at Stockholm University, Sweden.

Laura Stark is Professor of Ethnology at the University of Jyväskylä, Finland.