Abstract
This article provides a detailed analysis of rural Kenyan women and their interactions with the products and services of Safaricom Ltd., Kenya's dominant mobile network provider. The amplification theory of technology offers a framework for analyzing our data, and we find that differential motivation and capacity are mechanisms that appear to benefit the network provider, while disadvantaging rural mobile phone owners. In particular, the design of Safaricom's airtime scratch cards and mobile services does not support rural users’ capabilities. Our analysis suggests that technologists consider their ongoing responsibilities for technologies they built yesterday—that is, they should address problems inherent in the current design of mobile-phone interfaces. We offer practical recommendations on how to do this, and ask HCI/ICTD researchers and practitioners to more carefully consider how overlooking corporate power structures and their impact on mobile phone use amplifies social inequality.
References
- J. C. Aker and I. M. Mbiti. 2010. Mobile phones and economic development in Africa. Center for Global Development Working Paper 211 (2010).Google Scholar
- N. J. Bidwell. 2016. Moving the centre to design social media in rural Africa. AI & SOCIETY 31, 1 (2016), 51--77. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- E. Brewer, M. Demmer, B. Hu, M. Ho, M. Kam, S. Nedevshi, and K. Fall. 2005. The case for technology in developing regions. Computer 38, 6, 25--38. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- C. Chepken, E. Blake, and G. Marsden. 2013. ICTs and survival tactics for the day-labour workers: Implications for design. Paper Presented at the Proc. of IST-Africa.Google Scholar
- A. Crandall. 2012. Kenyan farmer's use of cell phones: calling preferred over SMS. In Proceedings of the Mobile for Development (M4D 2012), Karlstad University Studies Series.Google Scholar
- A. Crandall, A. Otieno, L. Mutuku, J. Colaço, J. Grosskuth, and P. Otieno. 2012. Mobile Phone Usage at the Kenyan Base of the Pyramid: Final Report. Retrieved from https://blogs.worldbank.org/ic4d/files/ic4d/mobile_phone_usage_kenyan_base_pyramid.pdf.Google Scholar
- N. Dell, V. Vaidyanathan, I. Medhi, E. Cutrell, and W. Thies. 2012. “Yours is better!” participant response bias in HCI. In Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI'12). Google Scholar
Digital Library
- J. Donner. 2007. The rules of beeping: Exchanging messages via intentional “missed calls” on mobile phones. J. Comput.-Mediated Commun. 13, 1, 1--22.Google Scholar
Digital Library
- J. Donner. 2008. Research approaches to mobile use in the developing world: a review of the literature. Inf. Soc. 24, 3, 140--159. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- K. Donovan. 2012. Mobile money, more freedom? The Impact of M-pesa.s Network Power on Development and Freedom. Int. J. Commmun. 6, 2647--2669.Google Scholar
- K. Donovan. 2015. Mobile money. In The International Encyclopedia of Digital Communication and Society.Google Scholar
- P. Dourish and S. Mainwaring. 2012. Ubicomp's colonial impulse. In Proceedings of the 2012 ACM Conference on Ubiquitous Computing (UbiComp’12). Google Scholar
Digital Library
- N. Eagle. 2009. Txteagle: mobile crowdsourcing. In Proceedings of the Internationalization, Design and Global Development. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- J. Grudin. 1992. Utility and usability: research issues and development contexts. Interact. Comput. 4, 2, 209--217.Google Scholar
Cross Ref
- A. Gupta, W. Thies, E. Cutrell, and R. Balakrishnan. 2012. mClerk: enabling mobile crowdsourcing in developing regions In Proceedings of CHI’12. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- M. Hagan, N. Zhang, and J. Kaye. 2012. Safe mathare: A mobile system for women's safe commutes in the slums. In Proceedings of the 14th International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction with Mobile Devices and Services Companion. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- N. Hughes and S. Lonie. 2007. M-PESA: mobile money for the “unbanked” turning cellphones into 24-hour tellers in Kenya. Innovations 2, 1--2, 63--81.Google Scholar
- L. Irani, J. Vertesi, P. Dourish, K. Philip, and R. E. Grinter. 2010. Postcolonial computing: A lens on design and development. In Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI’10). Google Scholar
Digital Library
- W. Jack and T. Suri. 2014. Risk sharing and transactions costs: Evidence from Kenya's mobile money revolution. The American Economic Review 104, 1 (2014), 183--223.Google Scholar
Cross Ref
- W. Jack and T. Suri. 2011. Mobile Money: The Economics of M-PESA (No. w16721).Google Scholar
Cross Ref
- B. Jopson. 2007. How safaricom gives voice to africa. Financial Times.Google Scholar
- S. K. Kane, C. Jayant, J. O. Wobbrock, and R. E. Ladner. 2009. Freedom to roam: a study of mobile device adoption and accessibility for people with visual and motor disabilities. In Proceedings of the 11th International ACM SIGACCESS Conference on Computers and Accessibility. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- J. Kaye, J. Vertesi, J. Ferreira, B. Brown, and M. Perry. 2014. CHImoney: financial interactions, digital cash, capital exchange and mobile money. In Proceedings of the CHI’14 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- The World Bank. 2014. Kenya. Retrieved from http://data.worldbank.org/country/kenya.Google Scholar
- L. Krefting. 1991. Rigor in qualitative research: The assessment of trustworthiness. Am. J. Occupational Ther. 45, 3, 214--222.Google Scholar
Cross Ref
- N. Kumar and R. J. Anderson. 2015. Mobile phones for maternal health in rural india. In Proceedings of the CHI’15. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- R. Kuriyan, N. Dawn, and M. Scott. 2012. Consumption, technology, and development: the “poor” as “consumer”. Information Technologies & International Development 8, 1 (2012), 1.Google Scholar
- S. Kurniawan. 2008. Older people and mobile phones: a multi-method investigation. Int. J. Hum.-Comput. Stud. 66, 12, 889--901. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- S. Kurniawan and Z. Panayiotis. 2005. Research-derived web design guidelines for older people. In Proceedings of the 7th International ACM SIGACCESS Conference on Computers and Accessibility. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- I. Mas and O. Morawczynski. 2009. Designing mobile money services lessons from M-PESA. Innovations 4, 2, 77--91.Google Scholar
Cross Ref
- I. Mas and A. Ng’weno. 2010. Three keys to M-PESA's success: branding, channel management and pricing. J. Payments Strategy Syst. 4, 4, 352--370.Google Scholar
- I. Medhi, S. Patnaik, E. Brunskill, S. N. N. Gautama, W. Thies, and K. Toyama. 2011. Designing mobile interfaces for novice and low-literacy users. ACM Transactions of Computer-Human Interaction 18, 1, Article 2. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- T. Molony. 2008. Running out of credit: the limitations of mobile telephony in a Tanzanian agricultural marketing system. J. Mod. African Stud. 46, 4, 637--658.Google Scholar
Cross Ref
- O. Morawczynski. 2008. Surviving in the dual system: how M-Pesa is fostering urban-to-rural remittances in a Kenyan slum. In Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Human Choice and Computers (HCC8).Google Scholar
- O. Morawczynski. 2009. Exploring the usage and impact of “transformational” mobile financial services: the case of M-PESA in Kenya. J. East. African Studies 3, 3, 509--525.Google Scholar
Cross Ref
- O. Morawczynski and M. Pickens. 2009. Poor people using mobile financial services: observations on customer usage and impact from M-PESA.Google Scholar
- C. Mudavadi and C. Weber. 2013. Safaricom Kenya Ltd: 2000 to 2010. In Proceedings of the PICMET’13: Technology Management for Emerging Technologies.Google Scholar
- L. Murphy. 2008. Mobile Phone Use and Users in Rural Africa: Findings from a Kenyan Village. Tulane University. Retrieved from http://www.llmurphy.net/research.html.Google Scholar
- L. Murphy and A. Priebe. 2011. “My co-wife can borrow my mobile phone!” gendered geographies of cell phone usage and significance for rural Kenyans. Gend., Technol. Development 15, 1, 1--23.Google Scholar
- P. Ngimwa, D. N. Ocholla, and J. Ojiambo. 1997. Media accessibility and utilization by Kenyan rural women. Int. Inf. Library Rev. 29, 1, 45--66.Google Scholar
Cross Ref
- E. Oduor, E. Neustaedter, T. Judge, K. Hennessy, C. Pang, and S. Hillman. 2014. How technology supports family communication in rural, suburban, and urban Kenya. In Proceedings of the 32nd Annual ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- E. Ombok and C. Wachira. 2015. Safaricom Full-Year Profit Surges as Non-Data Revenue Jumps. Bloomberg Technology. Retrieved from http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-05-07/safaricom-full-year-profit-surges-38-as-non-data-revenue-jumps.Google Scholar
- T. Parikh, P. Javid, K. Ghosh, and K. Toyama. 2006. Mobile phones and paper documents: evaluating a new approach for capturing microfinance data in rural India. In Proceedings of the CHI’06. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- N. Patel, D. Chittamuru, A. Jain, P. Dave, and T. S. Parikh. 2010. Avaaj otalo: a field study of an interactive voice forum for small farmers in rural India. In Proceedings of the CHI’10. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- T. Perrier, N. Dell, B. DeRenzi, R. Anderson, J. Kinuthia, J. Unger, and G. John-Stewart. 2015. Engaging pregnant women in Kenya with a hybrid computer-human SMS communication system. In Proceedings of the CHI’15. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- A. R. Potter. 1998. Providing spectacles in developing countries: millions endure poor vision for want of affordable glasses. BMJ: British Medical Journal 317, 7158 (1998), 551.Google Scholar
Cross Ref
- N. Sambasivan, P. Lee, G. Hecht, P. Aoki, M. I. Carrera, J. Chen, and A. T. Larssen. 2013. Chale, how much it cost to browse?: Results from a mobile data price transparency trial in ghana. In Proceedings of the International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies and Development (ICTD’13). Google Scholar
Digital Library
- J. C. Sherwin, J. E. Keeffe, H. Kuper, F. M. Amirul Islam, A. Muller, and W. Mathenge. 2008. Functional presbyopia in a rural Kenyan population: The unmet presbyopic need. Clin. Exp. Ophthalmol. 36, 245--251.Google Scholar
Cross Ref
- A. Strauss and J. Corbin. 1998. Basics of Qualitative Research: Techniques and Procedures for Developing Grounded Theory. Sage Publications Inc., Thousand Oaks, CA.Google Scholar
- K. Toyama. 2011. Technology as amplifier in international development. In Proceedings of the iConference’11. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- K. Toyama. 2015. Geek Heresy: Rescuing Social Change from the Cult of Technology. PublicAffairs, 2015.Google Scholar
- F. Velghe. 2014. ‘I wanna go in the phone’: literacy acquisition, informal learning processes, ‘voice’ and mobile phone appropriation in a South African township. Ethnography Education 9, 1, 111--126.Google Scholar
Cross Ref
- A. Wesolowski, N. Eagle, A. M. Noor, R. W. Smow, and C. O. Buckee. 2012. Heterogeneous mobile phone ownership and usage patterns in Kenya. PLoS ONE 7, 4.Google Scholar
Cross Ref
- S. Wiedenbeck, J. Waters, L. Sobrado, and J. C. Birget. 2006. Design and evaluation of a shoulder-surfing resistant graphical password scheme. In Proceedings of the Working Conference on Advanced Visual Interfaces (AVI’06). Google Scholar
Digital Library
- J. T. Wixted. 2004. The psychology and neuroscience of forgetting. Annu. Rev. Psychol. 55, 1, 235--269. DOI:10.1146/annurev.psych.55.090902.141555Google Scholar
Cross Ref
- S. Wyche, T. R. Dillahunt, N. Simiyu, and S. Alaka. 2015. “If God Gives Me the Chance I will Design My Own Phone”: Exploring Mobile Phone Repair and Postcolonial Approaches to Design in Rural Kenya. In Proceedings of the 2015 ACM International Joint Conference on Pervasive and Ubiquitous Computing (UbiComp’15). Google Scholar
Digital Library
- S. Wyche, C. Steinfield, T. Cai, N. Simiyu, and M. E. Othieno. 2016. Reflecting on video: exploring the efficacy of video for teaching device literacy in rural Kenya. In Proceedings of the International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies and Development (ICTD2016). Ann Arbor, MI. Google Scholar
Digital Library
- S. Wyche and C. Steinfield. 2015. Why don't farmers use cell phones to access market prices? technology affordances and barriers to market information services adoption in rural Kenya. Inf. Technol. Development 1--14.Google Scholar
- S. P. Wyche and L. L. Murphy. 2012. “Dead china-make” phones off the grid: investigating and designing for mobile phone use in rural Africa. In Proceedings of the Designing Interactive Systems Conference (DIS’12). Google Scholar
Digital Library
- M. Zuckerberg. 2013. Is connectivity a human right. Facebook Newsroom 20 (2013). Retrieved from https://www.facebook.com/isconnectivityahumanright.Google Scholar
- E. Zuckerman. 2010. Decentralizing the mobile phone: a second ICT4D revolution? Inf. Technol. Int. Development 6, 99.Google Scholar
Index Terms
Mobile Phones as Amplifiers of Social Inequality among Rural Kenyan Women





Comments