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Title of Journal: Ethics Inf Technol

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Abbravation: Ethics and Information Technology

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Springer Netherlands

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DOI

10.1016/0160-8002(79)90027-3

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1572-8439

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Editorial ICT and the capability approach

Authors: Ilse Oosterlaken Jeroen van den Hoven
Publish Date: 2011/03/13
Volume: 13, Issue: 2, Pages: 65-67
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Abstract

In discussions about justice development wellbeing and equality the capability approach CA1 founded by economist Amartya Sen and philosopher Martha Nussbaum attaches central importance to individual human capabilities These are the effective freedoms or real opportunities of people to achieve valuable ‘beings and doings’ also called ‘functionings’ by capability theorists Resources—including technical artifacts—may contribute to the expansion of one’s capabilities but there may also be all sorts of ‘conversion factors’ in place that prevent this The approach highlights the ‘multidimensionality’ of wellbeing and sees people as active agents shaping their own lives In 1998 Sen won the Nobel Prize in economics for his work which has deeply influenced the United Nations Development Program UNDP In the field of development studies the CA has indeed gained popularity but this is not the only area of applicationOne of the first articles to apply the CA to ICT was—as far as we know—that of Garnham 1997 “Thinking of entitlements in terms of functionings and capabilities” he argued convincingly “allows us to get behind the superficial indices of access and usage that we so often use” for ICT policy purposes In the last couple of years an increasing number of scholars seem to discover the potential of the CA for deliberations about ICT For example Van den Hoven and Rooksby 2008 acknowledge the profoundness of Sen’s critique on the Rawlsian concept of primary goods in their argument concerning information and distributive justice And Sen himself has recently 2010 also taken up the topic of ICT discussing the positive contribution of the mobile phone to the worldwide expansion of human capabilities Ethics and Information Technology had so far published two articles as part of this growing body of literature a broad agendasetting article Johnstone 2007 and an application to the digital divide more in particular websites ‘missing’ in the South Wresch 2009This special issue now brings together seven new articles on the topic It contains a mix of theoretical reflections and some applications and the articles are broadly ordered from the more abstract to the more concrete The three articles that present the most concrete detailed cases and that are thus introduced towards the end of this editorial happen to all focus on ‘ICT for Development’ ICT4D Although of great ethical significance the topics of poverty and development have so far not been covered in much detail in this journal and articles on ICT4D tend to be published in specialized journals2 This collection of papers introduces a ‘global justice’ outlook’ that clearly adds to the range of perspectives found in Ethics and Information Technology Yet as Mark Coeckelbergh rightly notices in his article “there is nothing intrinsic to the CA that gives us a reason to restrict the scope of the approach to people in developing countries” Let us now briefly introduce each of the articlesYingqin Zheng and Bernd Stahl argue that when applying the CA to ICT insights could be drawn from the field of critical theory which has a rich history of engaging with technology and ICT Both perspectives they argue share commonalities like a concern for empowerment One of the things that critical theory has to offer is an awareness that technology is not value neutral in this respect Critical theory “provides a more sophisticated and critical account of technology beyond the simplistic notion of goods and resources” If we want to expand human capabilities and agency with the help of ICT these authors make clear we should look into the design and regulation of technology Critical theory they claim helps to reveal and address that technology is implied in the distribution of power and sometimes in oppression and therefore possesses “ideological qualities” Yet Zheng and Stahl feel that critical theorists sometimes get stuck in their attempt to “debunk positive myths” about technology The CA provides a counterpoise to that “by seeing ICT as means to development and asking questions about what conversion factors need to be in place to facilitate the achievement of potential freedom that technology provides”Mark Coeckelbergh applies the CA to a topic that may seem to be far from the daily reality of the global poor ICT and human enhancement Yet he views this debate about “changing the capabilities by technological or other means” as not fundamentally different from that about striving for “human development reaching minimum levels of capabilities” and “human excellence maximizing levels of capabilities” This position is supported by arguments that “human existence is already a humantechnological existence” and has always been so What we need according to Coeckelbergh is “a hermeneutics of technohuman change involving interpretations of dynamic relations between unstable capabilities technologies practices and values” He thus criticizes the instrumentalism implicitly present in the CA which sees technologies as mere means to expand universal and timeless capabilities This obviously ties in with the debate between CA scholars about the validity of Nussbaum’s famous list of 10 central human capabilities which the author addresses towards the end of his articleWilliam Birdsall proposes a “close collaborative dialogue between the CA and ICT communities” in order to explore “how the real world application of ICT can contribute to expanding specific human capabilities” To facilitate such discourse he turns to the literature on the ‘right to communicate’ RTC The article meticulously explores the differences and parallels with the CA literature Although the latter tends to emphasize that capabilities resemble positive freedoms Birdsall judges that Nussbaum still focuses too much on traditional negative communication freedoms like the freedom of speech It is insufficiently recognized by the CA the author says that there is a need for a “reexamination of such traditional rights” Current developments in ICTs corporate concentration and the social structure of the media he claims threaten to make communication predominantly a oneway information flow This means that people have freedom of speech but many of them have insufficient capabilities for true communication and participation in societal dialogues To truly realize the RTC the CA and ICT community should collaborate and Birdsall ends with some suggestions on the shape this could takeMario Toboso addresses the pervasiveness and importance of human diversity which is a core theme within the literature on the CA Sen sometimes illustrates the implications of diversity with the example of a bicycle which may not result in an expanded capability to move about for a disabled person3 Yet “in the realm of ICT” Toboso asserts “a tradition of ‘standard’ design for users—anchored in some hypothetical parameters of ‘normality’—still prevails in product and services development Not even Internet technologies are free of barriers” In order to expand the capabilities of all people in their full diversity so the author argues more attention should be paid to “universal design” and user participation in the design of ICT To facilitate this change Toboso proposes to replace the idea of disability “with its negative connotations” with the more general concept of “functional diversity”—“describing the reality of persons who have the potential to access the same functionings as other people but in a different way”Dorothea Kleine notices that the multipurpose nature of ICT implies that it can in principle contribute a lot to expanding choice and agency both very important from the perspective of the CA Yet one of the challenges she claims is that the “development industry” is geared towards predetermined wellbeing impacts so in terms of certain ICT usages and human functionings instead of freedoms and capabilities Furthermore ICTs themselves may embed certain ideologies and hence there is a danger “that the technology circumscribes the choices of a usercitizen more than that it widens them” Thus it is important to systematically scrutinize ICTs and ICT projects on the basis of the CA In light of this Kleine’s article addresses the criticism in the general literature that the CA is hard to operationalize She proposes a framework that could be used “to deconstruct embedded ideologies and analyze the appropriateness of development goals to map development as a systemic process and to plan interventions which can result in increased freedom of choice for people” This is illustrated by some concrete cases including a telecentre in Chile


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