Abstract:
Over the last few years, the use of mobile phones, computers and the
Internet, has experienced unprecedented development in Africa. The rapid
adoption of these technologies by Africans and their proliferation on the
continent have sparked a vast literature and ideas that take for granted the
entry of Africa into the “global village” and the use of ICTs as a means for
the continent to escape marginalization and poverty. The proponents of this
point of view almost always point to a number of “social and economic
transformations” which, according to them, are the result of the use of ICTs.
Based on a literature review, statistics, and conversations, this article
scrutinizes the so-called “transformational” character of ICTs in Africa. It
underscores the limits of the changes observed, and concludes that Africans
remain essentially receivers and passive consumers of technological
productions and innovations made elsewhere.