Information and Communication Technology in Development: Cases from India
Information and Communication Technology in Development: Cases from India
Information and Communication Technologies: A World Bank Group Strategy
Information and Communication Technologies: A World Bank Group Strategy
Knowledge management in estonian regional administration: background, outputs, and unused resources
Information Technology for Development
Open standards and accessibility to information: a critical analysis of OOXML in India
Proceedings of the 1st international conference on Theory and practice of electronic governance
WSEAS Transactions on Information Science and Applications
Understanding benefits realisation of iREACH from a capability approach perspective
Ethics and Information Technology
Ethnography of the telephone: changing uses of communication technology in village life
Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Human Computer Interaction with Mobile Devices and Services
WSEAS Transactions on Computers
Strategic Use of Information Technology in the Spanish Microfinance Sector
Journal of Electronic Commerce in Organizations
Is ICT the Key to Development?
Journal of Global Information Management
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Information and Communications Technology (ICT) can reduce poverty by improving poor people's access to education, health, government and financial services. ICT can also help small farmers and artisans by connecting them to markets. It is clear that in rural India -as well as in much of the developing world- realization of this potential is not guaranteed. This paper outlines a sample model to explain why a digital divide may exist between rich and poor. Low-cost access to information infrastructure is a necessary prerequisite for the successful use of ICT by the poor, but it is not sufficient. The implementation of ICT projects needs to be performed by organizations and individuals who have the appropriate incentives to work with marginalized groups. Furthermore, grassroots intermediaries and the involvement of the community are identified as the key factors that foster local ownership and the availability of content and services that respond to the most pressing needs of the poor.