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  3. Vol. 21 No. 1-2 (2013): Africa Media Review, Volume 21, n° 1 & 2, 2013
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Vol. 21 No. 1-2 (2013): Africa Media Review, Volume 21, n° 1 & 2, 2013

Issue Published : February 1, 2016

9 - Les TIC ont-elles un sexe ? Les perspectives africaines en TIC et genre à la lumière des approches théoriques en communication

https://doi.org/10.57054/amr.v21i1-2.5156
Oumar Kane

Corresponding Author(s) : Oumar Kane

kane.oumar@uqam.ca

Africa Media Review, Vol. 21 No. 1-2 (2013): Africa Media Review, Volume 21, n° 1 & 2, 2013
Article Published : February 12, 2013

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Abstract

In this contribution, we will review gender- and ICT-related theoretical issues in the light of the positions developed by feminist research. An inventory of research in communication science will introduce the issue, laying emphasis on methodological and epistemological considerations. First, the universalist and differentialist approaches will be addressed and light will be shed on issues relating to their proponents’ positions on the issue of technology and information and communication technologies (ICTs). Second, the path taken subsequently by the constructivist approach will show how the reopening of the gender and technology categories is used to reconsider fruitfully the two previous approaches. The methods of the subsequent theoretical and methodological readjustment will be brought to light. Third, the ICTs and gender issue will be analysed in terms of its relationship to development, i.e., in so-called contexts of resource scarcity that happen to be located in so-called developing countries whose relationship to Western feminist research are already longstanding. We will show that the ICTs category is too wide to be used efficiently for the analysis, and that instead, we need to proceed as follows: first, distinguish ICTs according to the technical skills they require on the part of the user; next, consider that, in order to be able to analyse properly the practical effects of the problematisation, we need to take into account the various forms of accessibility (economic and geographic in particular); and last, that it is only in a third and final stage that the analysis of uses/non-uses will make it possible to think the improvement of women’s living conditions. In the concluding section, we will show that the way in which the issue of ICTs, gender and development is problematised makes the themes supportive of the universalist approach, despite some theoretical and strategic differences. A critical openness will enable us to lay the groundwork for an alternative research agenda that remains sensitive to the reduction of inequalities and the improvement of the living conditions of women and, more generally, of ICTs users in developing countries.

Keywords

gender and ICTs the gender of ICTs women and development communication and gender

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Oumar Kane. (2013). 9 - Les TIC ont-elles un sexe ? Les perspectives africaines en TIC et genre à la lumière des approches théoriques en communication. Africa Media Review, 21(1-2). https://doi.org/10.57054/amr.v21i1-2.5156
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References
  1. Butler, J., 2005, Trouble dans le genre. Pour un féminisme de la subversion, Paris : La Découverte. Caucus genre du SMSI, Résumé des recommandations. Seconde conférence régionale africaine
  2. préparatoire au SMSI. Accra, Ghana, 2-4 février 2005, en ligne, http://www.uneca.org/aisi/daw-ws/Summary_Recommendation_ French2005.pdf
  3. Fischer, C.S., 1988, « Gender and the Residential Telephone, 1890-1940, Technologies of Sociability », Sociological Forum, Vol. 3, No. 2, p. 211-233.
  4. Gardey, D., « De la domination à l’action. Quel genre d’usage des technologies de l’information ? », Réseaux 2003/4, N° 120, p. 87-117.
  5. Gillwald, A., Milek, A., et Stork, C., 2010, « Gender Assessment of ICT Access and Usage in Africa », Research ICT Africa Policy Paper, Vol. 1, No. 5, en ligne, http://ictupdate.cta.int/Links/Documents/ Gender-Assessment-of-ICT- Access-and-Usage-in-Africa
  6. Haraway, D., 1991, « A Cyborg Manifesto : Science, Technology and Socialist- Feminism in the Late Twentieth Century », in Simians, Cyborgs and Women: The Reinvention of Nature, New York: Routledge, p. 149-181.
  7. Jouët, J., 2003, « Technologies de communication et genre. Des relations en construction », Réseaux 2003/4, No. 120, p. 53-86.
  8. Kane, O., 2010, L’organisation des télécommunications au Sénégal, Paris: Karthala.
  9. Kelan, E. K., 2007, « Tools and Toys. Communicating Gendered Positions Towards Technology », Information, Communication & Society, Vol. 10, No. 3, p. 358–383.
  10. Mardsen, P. V., 1987, « Core Discussion Networks of Americans », American Sociological Review, Vol. 52, No. 1, p. 122-131.
  11. Quéré, L. et Smoreda, Z., 2000, « Présentation », Réseaux (Dossier spécial Le sexe du téléphone),
  12. Vol. 18, No. 103, p. 9-17.
  13. Réseau genre et TIC, 2004, « Citoyennes africaines de la société de l’information », Environnement africain (série «Etudes et Recherches»), en ligne, http://www.escueladefeminismo.org/spip.php?article16 Touré, M., s.d., La recherche sur le genre en afrique : quelques aspects épistemologiques,
  14. theoriques et culturels,en ligne, http://www.codesria.org/spip.php?article579&lang=en Tsatsou, P., Stafford, I., Higgs, G., Fry, R. et Berry, R., 2011, ICT Use and Connectivity of Minority Communities in Wales, en ligne, www.wiserd.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/.../CCDiscussionPaper.pdf
  15. United Nations Division for the Advancement of Women, 2003, Information and communication technologies and their impact on and use as an instrument for the advancement and empowerment of women, New York: UNDAW, en ligne http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw egm/ict2002/index.html
  16. Van Zoonen, L., 2002, « Gendering the Internet : Claims, Controversies and Cultures », European Journal of Communication , Vol. 17, No. 1, p. 5-23.
  17. Woolgar, S., 2000, « Virtual Technologies and Social Theory: a Technographic Approach », in Preferred Placement: Knowledge Politics on the Web, sous la dire de Richard Rogers, Maastricht: Jan Van Eyck Akademie Editions, p. 169-183.
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References


Butler, J., 2005, Trouble dans le genre. Pour un féminisme de la subversion, Paris : La Découverte. Caucus genre du SMSI, Résumé des recommandations. Seconde conférence régionale africaine

préparatoire au SMSI. Accra, Ghana, 2-4 février 2005, en ligne, http://www.uneca.org/aisi/daw-ws/Summary_Recommendation_ French2005.pdf

Fischer, C.S., 1988, « Gender and the Residential Telephone, 1890-1940, Technologies of Sociability », Sociological Forum, Vol. 3, No. 2, p. 211-233.

Gardey, D., « De la domination à l’action. Quel genre d’usage des technologies de l’information ? », Réseaux 2003/4, N° 120, p. 87-117.

Gillwald, A., Milek, A., et Stork, C., 2010, « Gender Assessment of ICT Access and Usage in Africa », Research ICT Africa Policy Paper, Vol. 1, No. 5, en ligne, http://ictupdate.cta.int/Links/Documents/ Gender-Assessment-of-ICT- Access-and-Usage-in-Africa

Haraway, D., 1991, « A Cyborg Manifesto : Science, Technology and Socialist- Feminism in the Late Twentieth Century », in Simians, Cyborgs and Women: The Reinvention of Nature, New York: Routledge, p. 149-181.

Jouët, J., 2003, « Technologies de communication et genre. Des relations en construction », Réseaux 2003/4, No. 120, p. 53-86.

Kane, O., 2010, L’organisation des télécommunications au Sénégal, Paris: Karthala.

Kelan, E. K., 2007, « Tools and Toys. Communicating Gendered Positions Towards Technology », Information, Communication & Society, Vol. 10, No. 3, p. 358–383.

Mardsen, P. V., 1987, « Core Discussion Networks of Americans », American Sociological Review, Vol. 52, No. 1, p. 122-131.

Quéré, L. et Smoreda, Z., 2000, « Présentation », Réseaux (Dossier spécial Le sexe du téléphone),

Vol. 18, No. 103, p. 9-17.

Réseau genre et TIC, 2004, « Citoyennes africaines de la société de l’information », Environnement africain (série «Etudes et Recherches»), en ligne, http://www.escueladefeminismo.org/spip.php?article16 Touré, M., s.d., La recherche sur le genre en afrique : quelques aspects épistemologiques,

theoriques et culturels,en ligne, http://www.codesria.org/spip.php?article579&lang=en Tsatsou, P., Stafford, I., Higgs, G., Fry, R. et Berry, R., 2011, ICT Use and Connectivity of Minority Communities in Wales, en ligne, www.wiserd.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/.../CCDiscussionPaper.pdf

United Nations Division for the Advancement of Women, 2003, Information and communication technologies and their impact on and use as an instrument for the advancement and empowerment of women, New York: UNDAW, en ligne http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw egm/ict2002/index.html

Van Zoonen, L., 2002, « Gendering the Internet : Claims, Controversies and Cultures », European Journal of Communication , Vol. 17, No. 1, p. 5-23.

Woolgar, S., 2000, « Virtual Technologies and Social Theory: a Technographic Approach », in Preferred Placement: Knowledge Politics on the Web, sous la dire de Richard Rogers, Maastricht: Jan Van Eyck Akademie Editions, p. 169-183.

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A biannual Journal of the Council for theDevelopment of Social Science Research in Africa and the African Council for Communication Education Revue semestrielle du Conseil pour le développement de la recherche en sciences sociales en Afrique et le Conseil africain pour l’enseignement de la communication
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