Electoral competition and digital development in India and South Africa

Jennifer Bussell
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

In the last decade many developing country governments made efforts to improve service delivery and access to information through the use of new information and communication technologies (ICTs). The character of these efforts, however, varies widely both across and within countries, resulting in continued inequality to access. What incentives influenced the initiation of these projects? How might variation in these incentives have affected the projects themselves? To answer these questions I compare the efforts of sub-national governments in India and South Africa to implement ICT-enabled service centers. In particular I consider what factors led to the implementation of ICT initiatives in urban versus rural areas. I find that politicians use ICT projects to achieve specific electoral goals and thus electoral conditions, specifically the character of political competition and ruling party support bases, can help to explain decisions to implement service centers for rural or urban populations. I use the cases of Gujarat, Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh in India and the Western Cape and Gauteng in South Africa to illustrate this argument.
印度和南非的选举竞争和数字发展
在过去十年中,许多发展中国家政府通过使用新的信息和通信技术(ict)努力改善服务提供和信息获取。然而,这些努力的性质在国家之间和国家内部差别很大,导致获得服务的不平等现象持续存在。是什么激励因素影响了这些项目的启动?这些激励措施的变化如何影响到项目本身?为了回答这些问题,我比较了印度和南非地方政府实施信息通信技术服务中心的努力。我特别考虑了导致在城市和农村地区实施ICT举措的因素。我发现政治家使用ICT项目来达到特定的选举目标,因此选举条件,特别是政治竞争的性质和执政党的支持基础,可以帮助解释为农村或城市人口设立服务中心的决定。我以印度的古吉拉特邦、泰米尔纳德邦和安得拉邦以及南非的西开普省和豪登省为例来说明这一论点。
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