Imagining a Silicon Valley : technological and conceptual connectivity in Kenya's BPO and software development sectors

TitleImagining a Silicon Valley : technological and conceptual connectivity in Kenya's BPO and software development sectors
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2013
AuthorsM. Graham, and L. Mann
Secondary TitleElectronic journal of information systems in developing countries
Volume56
Issue2
Pagination1 - 19
Date Published2013///
Publication Languageeng
Keywordsinformation technology, Kenya
Abstract

This is a paper about expectations surrounding a potentially highly transformative moment in East Africa's history: the arrival of underwater fibre-optic broadband communications cables into the Indian Ocean port of Mombasa. It combines a media content analysis with findings from interviews with business owners in Kenya's nascent business process outsourcing (BPO) and software development sectors in order to explore how such moments of technological 'connectivity' are imagined, marketed and enacted within economic development. It argues that connectivity is not just a matter of boosting physical/material capacity but also about redressing conceptual connectivity; bringing places 'closer together' involves rehabilitating the images of places in peoples' minds and removing imagined senses of distance. As such, technologies of connectivity are marketed not just as tools of altered communications affordances, but more importantly, as momentary opportunities for revisiting the image of places from afar. Additionally, the cables reveal the importance of fostering internal linkages in order to better build international recognition and connections. 'Moments of expectation' that surround new ICT technologies reveal how discourse and representation play a strong role in enabling markets to form and change. The very idea of 'connectivity' itself is driving plans and policies throughout the region.

IR handle/ Full text URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1887/32271
Citation Key7003