Dot Com Mantra Social Computing in the Central Himalayas Payal Arora Dot Com mantra Voices in Development management Series Editor: margaret Grieco napier University, Scotland the Voices in Development management series provides a forum in which grass roots organisations and development practitioners can voice their views and present their perspectives along with the conventional development experts. many of the volumes in the series will contain explicit debates between various voices in development and permit the suite of neglected development issues such as gender and transport or the microcredit needs of low income communities to receive appropriate public and professional attention. also in the series Participatory Development in Kenya Josephine Syokau mwanzia and robert Craig Strathdee ISBn 978 0 7546 7877 9 The Dominance of Management A Participatory Critique Leonard Holmes ISBn 978 0 7546 1184 4 Losing Paradise The Water Crisis in the Mediterranean Edited by Gail Holst-Warhaft and tammo Steenhuis ISBn 978 0 7546 7573 0 Tourism, Development and Terrorism in Bali michael Hitchcock and I nyoman Darma Putra ISBn 978 0 7546 4866 6 Women Miners in Developing Countries Pit Women and Others Edited by Kuntala Lahiri-Dutt and martha macintyre ISBn 978 0 7546 4650 1 Africa’s Development in the Twenty-first Century Pertinent Socio-Economic and Development Issues Edited by Kwadwo Konadu-agyemang and Kwamina Panford ISBn 978 0 7546 4478 1 Dot Com mantra Social Computing in the Central Himalayas PayaL arora Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands © Payal arora 2010 all rights reserved. no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior permission of the publisher. Payal arora has asserted her right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents act, 1988, to be identified as the author of this work. Published by ashgate Publishing Limited ashgate Publishing Company Wey Court East Suite 420 Union road 101 Cherry Street Farnham Burlington Surrey, GU9 7Pt Vt 05401-4405 England USa www.ashgate.com British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data arora, Payal. Dot com mantra : social computing in the central Himalayas. -- (Voices in development management) 1. Internet--Social aspects--Himalaya mountains region. 2. Internet--Economic aspects--Himalaya mountains region. 3. right to Internet access--Himalaya mountains region. 4. Computer users--Himalaya mountains region. 5. Internet and the poor--Himalaya mountains region. 6. Education-- Effect of technological innovations on--Himalaya mountains region. 7. rural poor--Education--technological innovations--Himalaya mountains region. I. title II. Series 303.4'834'095496-dc22 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data arora, Payal. Dot com mantra : social computing in the Central Himalayas / by Payal arora. p. cm. -- (Voices in development management) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBn 978-1-4094-0107-0 (hbk) -- ISBn 978-1-4094-0108-7 (ebk) 1. Internet--Social aspects--India--almora. 2. Computer networks--Social aspects--India-- almora. 3. Computer literacy--India--almora. 4. almora (India)--Social conditions. I. title. Hn690.a455a76 2010 303.48'33095451--dc22 2010017056 ISBn 9781409401070 (hbk) ISBn 9781409401087 (ebk)II Contents List of Figures vii Foreword ix by mark Warschauer Preface xi List of Abbreviations xiii 1 Introduction 1 Local as Celebrity 1 Social Learning with Computers 2 methodology 4 techno-revelations for Development Policy and Practice 7 organization of the argument 8 2 Frogs to Princes: Taking the Leap 13 the Pathway to Good Intentions: the Development Story 13 new technology and Social Change 16 anthropology of the artifact: Contexts – Communities – Conducts 21 Human Ingenuity, technology and Development in India 25 PArT I ALMOrA 3 This is India, Madam! 33 In Search of a Man-Eating Catfish 33 Here Comes Sonia Gandhi! 39 Swami Mafia 40 In God We trust, the rest is all Cash: the Simple Villager? 44 4 New Technology, Old Practices 55 It’s all in the Family 55 the Darling Child of Development: the Cellphone 59 Cashing in on technology 61 Playing Low Key 63 Chullah and the Pump: Gender and technology 66 vi Dot Com Mantra PArT II COMPuTErS AND rurAL DEvELOPMENT 5 Goodbye to the Patwaris 71 Peasant revolutions of the Past and Present 71 new Intermediaries in the making 73 E-agriculture Solutions Coming to town 76 Kisan Sangattans 78 Consensus, Contention and Circulation of Conversation 80 Learning to Decide 94 6 Excavating relics of an Educational Idea: The romance of Free Learning 97 Ethnographer as archeologist 97 Digging Up the Past 100 School as you Go 102 Private Distance from Public Education 105 Playground Kiosk Democracy 106 a Beautiful Idea 109 PArT III COMPuTING AND CyBErCAFéS 7 Copycats and underdogs of the Himalayas 115 Cybercafés as after-School Centers 115 you Scratch my Back, I Scratch yours 118 Who’s the Boss? 124 the Perfect thesis 130 the “Epidemic” of Plagiarism 133 8 Let’s Go Shopping! 137 new Educational Consumers 137 Shop till you Drop 138 mona Lisa and Bathroom tiles 144 are Finders Keepers? 148 9 Leisure, Labor, Learning 149 orkut Saves the Day 149 Can the Poor Come out to Play? 151 the tale of two People 157 the Blasphemy of Leisure 162 10 Conclusion 167 Bibliography 173 Index 187 List of Figures 1.1 map of Uttarakhand, India 3 1.2 researcher with Balwadi teachers at USnPSS 6 3.1 House on the Hill in almora 34 3.2 View of Settlements in almora 35 3.3 Signs of Cybercafés on Entering almora town 37 3.4 Woman and Girl Carrying Firewood 47 4.1 a Balwadi (Pre-School) Gathering 55 4.2 a Village Home 56 4.3 Village Water Pump 66 5.1 Uttarakhand Seva nidhi 80 6.1 HiWEL Learning Station in almora town 97 6.2 HiWEL Learning Station in Hawalbagh Village 98 6.3 Boys at a Computer Kiosk in andhra Pradesh, India 108 7.1 Cybercafé in almora town 116 7.2 Signage outside Cybercafé 117 9.1 Matrix appropriated 150 9.2 Digital romance Fantasy 150 Table 9.1 Comparison of Intercolleges on Computers in almora 152 To Padraig Seosamh Tobin Foreword mark Warschauer Professor of Education and Informatics, University of California, Irvine In a recent discussion of the one Laptop Per Child (oLPC) program’s desire to place computers in the hands of every Indian child, one laptop enthusiast was asked how he was so confident that rural children, who may have never been to school, could make productive use of laptops for learning. “Well, after all,” he replied, “they are digital natives.” Deterministic views of the positive power of technology are seldom as extreme as this; after all, how many people believe that simply being born in the information era will endow certain capabilities on youth, even if they and their friends, relatives, neighbors and teachers, may never have touched a computer? yet the belief that new technology has some magical power to solve or bypass complex social, educational, economic and political problems is certainly widespread, as witnessed, for example, by the oLPC program itself (for one critique, see Kraemer, Dedrick and Sharma, 2009). Unfortunately, the most common counter to this naïve techno-optimism is a narrow-sighted techno-pessimism that focuses solely on the problems associated with new media and fails to recognize their potential value in individual and social development. Techno-pessimists deny that those on the margins could benefit from any use of computers, since presumably all other more pressing social and economic problems would need to be solved before the poor could productively deploy new technology. Chris Dede succinctly foiled both the techno-optimists and pessimists with a simple metaphor. as he explained in testimony to the US Congress: Information technologies are more like clothes than like fire. Fire is a wonderful technology because, without knowing anything about how it operates, you can get warm just standing close by. People sometimes find computers, televisions and telecommunications frustrating because they expect these devices to radiate knowledge. But all information technologies are more like clothes; to get a benefit, you must make them a part of your personal space, tailored to your needs. new media complement existing approaches to widen our repertoire of communication; properly designed, they do not eliminate choices or force us into high tech, low touch situations. (Dede, 1995)
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