Negotiating Openness Across Science, ICTs and Participatory Development: Lessons from the AfricaAdapt Network

Abstract

This article reflects critically on forms of openness and participation emerging from a collaborative network using information technologies for knowledge sharing on climate change and international development. It explores how multiple interpretations of these concepts coalesce around a particular initiative, shaping ways of working and understanding across different epistemic cultures (Knorr-Cetina, 1999) in the network. 皇冠体育app resultant shared meanings and practices, it is argued, are a product of existent epistemic and participatory cultures, internal and external dynamics and economies of power, and emergent ways of working that are further shaped by engagement with particular information technologies and protocols. 皇冠体育app process through which these shared meanings are constructed, however, is rarely transparent or openly reflected on, but rather, it emerges through the normalization of particular practices that 鈥渙rganize鈥� our social relations. This limits our understanding of how a given 鈥渁rchitecture of participation鈥� has been constructed, or how it has situated those working in it. I consider the influence that these processes of meaning-making have had on the present shape of the network and reflect on what this means for such forms of collaboration more generally.

Citation

Harvey, B. Negotiating Openness Across Science, ICTs and Participatory Development: Lessons from the AfricaAdapt Network. Information Technologies and International Development (2011) 7 (1) 19-31.

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2011