Title
Real mobiles: Kenyan and Zambian smallholder farmers' current attitudes towards mobile phones
Abstract
What are rural farmers in sub-Saharan Africa's current attitudes towards their mobile phones? We draw from qualitative studies of smallholder farmers in Kenya and Zambia to answer this question. A review of ongoing efforts to develop mobile phone services for farmers paired with critiques of the \"colonial impulse\" embedded in future-oriented visions of technology use guided our study. Our findings suggest there is a mismatch between the design of mobile phone applications and our participants' perceptions and usage of their devices. We also discovered several understudied barriers that hinder adoption of mobile services: the influx of counterfeit and substandard mobile phones, distrust of the content being delivered via SMS and reservations about the spiritual and health consequences accompanying phone use. We use these findings to encourage Information and Communication Technology and Development (ICTD) researchers and practitioners to re-examine the mobile phone. Specifically, we suggest developing interventions that teach farmers how to better use phones and present recommendations for improving their design.
Year
DOI
Venue
2015
10.1145/2737856.2738013
ICTD
DocType
Citations 
PageRank 
Conference
7
0.49
References 
Authors
9
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Susan Wyche19611.53
Melissa Densmore2185.53
Brian Samuel Geyer370.49