Title
“The Official Response is Never Enough”
Abstract
The Rockefeller Foundation shipped two Apple II computers with VisiCalc to the Tunisian Ministry of Agriculture to address a grain shortage in the early 1980s. The foundation believed that VisiCalc would enable the speedy and complex analytical modeling necessary to improve the management and, consequently, the production of grain resources. The foundation also argued that VisiCalc would empower individuals in the Ministry of Agriculture, improving their own analytical thinking as they became more familiar with the modeling capabilities of the software. Even with the use of VisiCalc, Tunisia experienced violent riots due to high bread prices after the government's removal of grain subsidies. This paper explores the narratives and uses of VisiCalc in the Tunisian Ministry of Agriculture in addressing this food crisis both before and after the riots. The work here contributes to computing history through an analysis of the historical relationships among governing bodies, nongovernment organizations, technology, and the global financial economy. It argues that the uses of VisiCalc in Tunisia were connected with financial austerity firmly aligned with Western interests. In doing so, this paper shows how a focus on postcolonial Africa can enrich the international history of computing.
Year
DOI
Venue
2019
10.1109/MAHC.2019.2897274
IEEE Annals of the History of Computing
Keywords
Field
DocType
Government,Agriculture,Production,Oils,Computers,Africa
Subsidy,Christian ministry,Austerity,Software engineering,Political economy,Computer science,Narrative,Agriculture,Analytical skill,History of computing,Government
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
41
1
1058-6180
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
0
0.34
0
Authors
1
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Kera Allen100.34