ICT Policies as a Means to Inhibit Social Exclusion: The South African Case

Publication Type:

IFIP Paper

Source:

Social Inclusion: Societal and Organizational Implications for Information Systems, p.137 - 150 (2006)

Abstract:

Social exclusion is a multi dimensional phenomenon that manifests itself in the exclusion of an individual from one or more of the four following activities: production of goods and services, consumption, civil engagement, and social interaction.
Information and communication technologies (ICTs) have been argued to have the potential to reduce these forms of social exclusion.
However, the extent to which they deal with these different forms of social exclusion remains unknown. Therefore, in this
study we examine how ICT policies in South Africa are being employed to reduce social exclusion. In particular, we analyze
which dimensions of social exclusion are targeted in telecommunication laws and one of the ICT initiatives of the South African
government, Multi-Purpose Community Centers (MPCCs). Using a framework that portrays the four forms of social exclusion within
the discourses used in phenomenon debates (redistributionist, moral underclass, and social integrationist) for analysis, we
find that ICT policies in South Africa address two of the four forms of social exclusion: production of goods and services
and civil engagement, spanning both the redistributionist and social integrationist discourses of social exclusion.

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