Affiliation:
1. London School of Economics and Political Science
Abstract
The G8's announcement at the Okinawa Summit of 2000 that it would be promoting a new programme aimed at `bridging the digital divide' between the industrialised North and South, with Africa as a particular focus, was touted as a new development strategy that would enable Africa to `leapfrog' into modernity. Not only was this approach grounded in some dubious assumptions as well as a misreading of the antecedents for ICT growth in a developing country, more fundamentally, it served to distort development priorities away from core issues like debt and poverty alleviation towards the pursuit of a `virtual panacea' for Africa's deep-rooted problems. In so doing, it exposed — yet again — the structural inequities that underlie the relationship between the North and the South and the concomitant shortcomings of established mechanisms of global governance.
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
15 articles.
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