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Mobile phone use in Australian indigenous communities: future pathways for HCI4D

Published:02 December 2014Publication History

ABSTRACT

This paper collates recent research on mobile phone use in Indigenous communities in Australia. Its key finding is that mobile phones are heavily used in these communities, albeit in unique and unusual ways that may be difficult to comprehend beneath 'top-down' measurements. Rather than framing these uses as being compromises made in lieu of appropriate infrastructures or literacies, it is argued that HCI4D (Human-Computer Interaction for Development) would be better served by seriously plumbing into the information they reveal about how mobile phones are constructed and placed in these communities, and what these factors might reveal about local understandings of development and well-being. A consideration of these specific patterns of appropriation is necessary to push the field beyond top-down, rationalist approaches to development towards more flexible, creative solutions that build from local knowledge and competencies.

References

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  • Published in

    cover image ACM Other conferences
    OzCHI '14: Proceedings of the 26th Australian Computer-Human Interaction Conference on Designing Futures: the Future of Design
    December 2014
    689 pages
    ISBN:9781450306539
    DOI:10.1145/2686612
    • Conference Chair:
    • Tuck Leong

    Copyright © 2014 ACM

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    Association for Computing Machinery

    New York, NY, United States

    Publication History

    • Published: 2 December 2014

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    Acceptance Rates

    OzCHI '14 Paper Acceptance Rate85of176submissions,48%Overall Acceptance Rate362of729submissions,50%

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