By: T. B. Dinesh (India)

Learn about the Project
The aim of this project is to analyse and conceptualize what community participation means in the context of technology, and how technology facilitates/debilitates the interactions within the communities in different contexts. The project is premised on the grounds that the creation of software technology or a platform for a community/institution is not the end, but the start of a process. We therefore seek to examine how community participation in the development and use of technology can take place when the community in involved in defining and constructing the technology and its standards, and is imbricated in its evolution.
This proposition simultaneously poses questions concerning:
This project will take into account the above issues in examining participation and technology. The other questions that will be considered and examined in the research are:
Findings
School Information Management System:
The school information management system project ended last year with the report that emphasizes the need to let teachers indulge in developing the requirements for an information management system for their schools. The report also indicates how the comfort with computers and the earlier opportunity for teachers to have a say in their information management system needs have turned a private school into being proactive in developing their own modules compared to attempts of computerization efforts by government that targets their own need to compile period reports from the schools. Language and contextual representation of information and data will be of key importance in managing information for school communities.
Nemmadi Kendras (NKs)
Drawing on the social shaping of technology perspectives, the findings suggest that a thorough analysis of the impact of information technologies in governance necessitates paying attention to the larger political and social processes within which the technology is introduced and embedded. The introduction of information technologies in a fraught and contested context adds more layers (in terms of bureaucracy and middlemen), which rural citizens have to navigate before they can actually attain services. Concerns related to costs, scale and political dynamics in the design of databases are also investigated. The report concludes by advocating the ‘embedded’ approach for studying the role of ICTs in governance.
PI’s Current Progress (To be made available soon)
Video clip of T. B. Dinesh sharing his experience with SIRCA Programme. *This video is made together with another Principal Investigator M.J.R. David (Sri Lanka)