Fellowships awarded by Amy Mahan Research Program

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The Amy Mahan Research Fellowship Program to Assess the Impact of Public Access to ICT has announced the winners of the awards. Twelve teams from 12 different countries - four each from Africa, Asia and the Latin America and Caribbean region - will receive up to €22,000 in funding plus specialized mentoring guidance to enable them to carry out an original research project that addresses one or more critical questions regarding the impact of public access to ICTs.

The program's main goals are to deepen and strengthen the capacity of researchers in developing countries to promote rigorous studies on public access to ICTs, as well as to stimulate the commitment to this issue of qualified academics in developing countries. To this end a call for proposals was launched last year.

DIRSI coordinator Jorge Bossio heads one of he winning teams (Instituto de Estudios Peruanos, Peru) and the project Impact of public Internet access on the strengthening of social organizations in the Peruvian Andes.

The other winning projects and their affiliated institutions are:

  • The Internet Shops/Centers: Empowering Women Migrant Workers and Refugees in Thailand – NGO WEAVE - Women's Education for Advancement and Empowerment, Thailand
  • Understanding Cybercafe Users' Willingness to Pay in Mainland China - Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
  • Rural Internet Centers (RICs)' Patterns of Utilization and its Impact on the Users' Sense of Connectedness - Universiti Teknologi MARA, Malaysia
  • The Impact of Public Access to ICTs on Lower Class Urban Youth in Argentina - Universidad Nacional de La Plata, Argentina
  • Women and New Technologies in Chile: the Impact of community and public access on digital gender inclusion - Universidad Diego Portales, Chile
  • Influence of Network Roles on Public Access ICT Venues Capacities in Uganda - UgaBYTES Initiative, Uganda
  • Nature and Impact of Shared Public Access to Internet in Towns and Rural Areas in Developing Countries: A Case of Cybercafés and Telecenters in India - Institute for Human Development, India
  • An Assessment of the Impact of Commercial Internet Centers (Cyber Cafes) on Users in Jamaica - University of Technology, Jamaica
  • Multipurpose Community Telecentres: tools for improving universal access and change in rural Cameroon - NGO Protege QV, Cameroon
  • The Socioeconomic Impact of Internet Cafes on the Jordanian Community - University of Jordan, Jordan
  • Public Access to IT skills/training and users job prospects - National University of Rwanda, Rwanda

The Amy Mahan Research Fellowship Program to Assess the Impact of Public Access to ICTs is a project lasting eighteen months sponsored by the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) and administered by the University Pompeu Fabra (UPF - Barcelona, Spain), in collaboration with academics from the University of San Andrés in Buenos Aires (Argentina), the University of the Philippines in Manila and the LINK Centre at the University of Witwatersrand in South Africa. The program is coordinated by Prof. Francisco Proenza and David Sancho of the Department of Political and Social Sciences of the UPF. The program is part of the Global Impact Study of Public Access to Information & Communication Technologies.

 
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Amy Mahan | 1961-2009

Amy Mahan

Amy Mahan was a founding member of DIRSI. At the time of her death she had made important contributions to the research and program design of a number of ICT for development initiatives. It is with deep gratitude for her scholarship, personal courage and humanity, that we honor her by establishing this fellowship program.

The Amy Mahan Young Researcher Fellowships in ICT Inclusion Policies is one of a number of number of initiatives in honour of our friend and colleague. Other initiatives are:

Amy Mahan Research Fellowship Program to Assess the Impact of Public Access to ICTs

Global Information Society Watch 2009 dedicated to Amy Mahan

LACNIC Outstanding Achievement Award - Posthumous honorary mention