The capability approach and the `medium of choice': steps towards conceptualising information and communication technologies for development

  • Authors:
  • Dorothea Kleine

  • Affiliations:
  • ICT4D Collective/UNESCO Chair in ICT4D, Department of Geography, Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham, UK TW20 0EX

  • Venue:
  • Ethics and Information Technology
  • Year:
  • 2011

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Abstract

Amartya Sen's capability approach has become increasingly popular in development studies. This paper identifies controllability and operationalisability as two key stumbling blocks which prevent the capability approach from being used even more widely in development practice. It discusses the origins and application of the Choice Framework, a conceptual tool designed to help operationalise the approach. The framework can be used to deconstruct embedded ideologies and analyse the appropriateness of development goals, to map development as a systemic process, and to plan interventions which can result in increased freedom of choice for people. Three examples of the application of the Choice Framework in the field of information and communication for development (ICT4D) are given. The three technologies which are examined, telecentres (Infocentros), Chilecompra and Fair Tracing, can be placed at different places of a determinism continuum, some reducing the spectrum of choices a user has. The paper argues that while frameworks such as the Choice Framework can be developed further to increase the operationalisability of the capability approach, it is up to development funders to accept the fact that people's choices are never fully predictable and thus Sen's `development as freedom' will inevitably be a dynamic and open-ended process.