Literature DB >> 21240958

"MXing it up": how African adolescents may affect social change through mobile phone use.

Christopher M Napolitano1.   

Abstract

This chapter outlines mobile phone use among African (particularly South African) adolescents. With an estimated 350 million active mobile phone subscriptions, improving network infrastructure, low-cost Internet-ready handsets, innovative programs and applications, mobiles in Africa, and their increasingly younger, increasingly poorer, and increasingly savvy users have the potential to act as conduits for local and regional socially just change. This broad-based connectedness not only provides access to information, but also, and crucially, connects individuals and their social, intellectual, and financial capital. It may represent a powerful, transformative shift in a region where access to similar technologies was historically limited to a privileged few. In order to best leverage these developments and opportunities to promote socially just change, I argue that future mobile-based programs or initiatives in the region should be based in both contemporary developmental systems theory as well as current, popular mobile applications and services.

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 21240958     DOI: 10.1002/yd.380

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  New Dir Youth Dev        ISSN: 1533-8916


  1 in total

1.  A randomized controlled trial study of the acceptability, feasibility, and preliminary impact of SITA (SMS as an Incentive To Adhere): a mobile technology-based intervention informed by behavioral economics to improve ART adherence among youth in Uganda.

Authors:  Sarah MacCarthy; Zachary Wagner; Alexandra Mendoza-Graf; Carlos Ignacio Gutierrez; Clare Samba; Josephine Birungi; Stephen Okoboi; Sebastian Linnemayr
Journal:  BMC Infect Dis       Date:  2020-02-24       Impact factor: 3.090

  1 in total

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