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A socio-technical contract: Network governance and ICT4D in Turkey

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A socio-technical contract: Network governance and ICT4D in Turkey. / Hoyng, Rolien Susanne.
In: Telematics and Informatics, Vol. 33, No. 1, 28.02.2016, p. 139-149.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Hoyng RS. A socio-technical contract: Network governance and ICT4D in Turkey. Telematics and Informatics. 2016 Feb 28;33(1):139-149. doi: 10.1016/j.tele.2015.06.011

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Hoyng, Rolien Susanne. / A socio-technical contract : Network governance and ICT4D in Turkey. In: Telematics and Informatics. 2016 ; Vol. 33, No. 1. pp. 139-149.

Bibtex

@article{695fe590ead84595aa6d3d397fe17841,
title = "A socio-technical contract: Network governance and ICT4D in Turkey",
abstract = "Critiques of Information and Communication for Development (ICT4D) often highlight the ways in which programs are disempowering rather than empowering, due to their furthering of capitalism and/or neoliberalism. While not denying the relevance of these critiques, this article looks at the multiple, unstable, and at times contradictory effects of the micropolitics of ICT4D assemblages and their articulation to the more general project of the “information society” in Turkey. Mobilizing a Foucauldian framework of governmentality, this article considers norms, rationalities, and models of governance as technologies of power that are productive of certain socio-technical orders, while distributing agency within them. In the Turkish context, ICT4D is implicated in the trend toward multistakeholderism, or network governance, steered by non-governmental organizations, tech companies, and the United Nations. I argue that ICT4D governance networks operate on the basis of two governing logics: participatory self-governance with regard to “local” and “communal” affairs and biopolitical management with regard to “global” affairs, including the modes of operation of informational capitalism. Yet networking as a micropolitical practice and a political imaginary can also challenge the stratification of spheres of participation and biopolitical management.",
keywords = "ICT4D, Technology and politics, Network governance, Governmentality, Participation",
author = "Hoyng, {Rolien Susanne}",
year = "2016",
month = feb,
day = "28",
doi = "10.1016/j.tele.2015.06.011",
language = "English",
volume = "33",
pages = "139--149",
journal = "Telematics and Informatics",
issn = "0736-5853",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A socio-technical contract

T2 - Network governance and ICT4D in Turkey

AU - Hoyng, Rolien Susanne

PY - 2016/2/28

Y1 - 2016/2/28

N2 - Critiques of Information and Communication for Development (ICT4D) often highlight the ways in which programs are disempowering rather than empowering, due to their furthering of capitalism and/or neoliberalism. While not denying the relevance of these critiques, this article looks at the multiple, unstable, and at times contradictory effects of the micropolitics of ICT4D assemblages and their articulation to the more general project of the “information society” in Turkey. Mobilizing a Foucauldian framework of governmentality, this article considers norms, rationalities, and models of governance as technologies of power that are productive of certain socio-technical orders, while distributing agency within them. In the Turkish context, ICT4D is implicated in the trend toward multistakeholderism, or network governance, steered by non-governmental organizations, tech companies, and the United Nations. I argue that ICT4D governance networks operate on the basis of two governing logics: participatory self-governance with regard to “local” and “communal” affairs and biopolitical management with regard to “global” affairs, including the modes of operation of informational capitalism. Yet networking as a micropolitical practice and a political imaginary can also challenge the stratification of spheres of participation and biopolitical management.

AB - Critiques of Information and Communication for Development (ICT4D) often highlight the ways in which programs are disempowering rather than empowering, due to their furthering of capitalism and/or neoliberalism. While not denying the relevance of these critiques, this article looks at the multiple, unstable, and at times contradictory effects of the micropolitics of ICT4D assemblages and their articulation to the more general project of the “information society” in Turkey. Mobilizing a Foucauldian framework of governmentality, this article considers norms, rationalities, and models of governance as technologies of power that are productive of certain socio-technical orders, while distributing agency within them. In the Turkish context, ICT4D is implicated in the trend toward multistakeholderism, or network governance, steered by non-governmental organizations, tech companies, and the United Nations. I argue that ICT4D governance networks operate on the basis of two governing logics: participatory self-governance with regard to “local” and “communal” affairs and biopolitical management with regard to “global” affairs, including the modes of operation of informational capitalism. Yet networking as a micropolitical practice and a political imaginary can also challenge the stratification of spheres of participation and biopolitical management.

KW - ICT4D

KW - Technology and politics

KW - Network governance

KW - Governmentality

KW - Participation

U2 - 10.1016/j.tele.2015.06.011

DO - 10.1016/j.tele.2015.06.011

M3 - Journal article

VL - 33

SP - 139

EP - 149

JO - Telematics and Informatics

JF - Telematics and Informatics

SN - 0736-5853

IS - 1

ER -