Journal: IT for Development

Volume 26, Issue 4

637 -- 652Judy van Biljon, Kweku-Muata Osei-Bryson. The communicative power of knowledge visualizations in mobilizing information and communication technology research
653 -- 669Franz-Ferdinand Rothe. Rethinking positive and negative impacts of 'ICT for development' through the holistic lens of the sustainable development goals
670 -- 691Joseph G. Bock, Ziaul Haque, Kevin A. McMahon. Displaced and dismayed: how ICTs are helping refugees and migrants, and how we can do better
692 -- 710Caroline Stratton, David Nemer. ICTD Research in Latin America: literature review, scholar feedback, and recommendations
711 -- 727Jinhee Kim. Voices of youth in reconceptualising and repositioning the role of mobile learning for sustainable development
728 -- 741Domingo Nevado-Peña, Víctor-Raúl López-Ruiz, José-Luis Alfaro-Navarro. An analysis of the key role of human and technological development in the smart specialization of smart European regions
742 -- 761Peter Adjei-Bamfo, Kwame Ameyaw Domfeh, Justice Nyigmah Bawole, Albert Ahenkan, Theophilus Maloreh-Nyamekye, Stephanie Adjei-Bamfo, Samuel Antwi Darkwah. An e-government framework for assessing readiness for public sector e-procurement in a lower-middle income country
762 -- 772Adebowale Owoseni, Hossana Twinomurinzi. Evaluating mobile app usage by service sector micro and small enterprises in Nigeria: an abductive approach
773 -- 787Manas Tripathi, Sarveshwar Kumar Inani. Does information and communications technology affect economic growth? Empirical evidence from SAARC countries
788 -- 810Maitrayee Mukerji, Unnati Chauhan. A social network analysis of ICTD conferences (2006-2017)
811 -- 836Ananchanok Watchaton, Donyaprueth Krairit. Exploring university perceptions of IS implementation and attributes of success: a case study of public universities in Thailand
837 -- 855Naci Karkin, Marijn Janssen. Structural changes driven by e-petitioning technology: changing the relationship between the central government and local governments

Volume 26, Issue 3

445 -- 457Sajda Qureshi. Outrage and anger in a global pandemic: flipping the script on healthcare
458 -- 476Yan Li 0018, Manoj A. Thomas, Debra Stoner, Sarbartha S. J. B. Rana. Citizen-centric capacity development for ICT4D: the case of continuing medical education on a stick
477 -- 505Isaac Holeman, Dianna Kane. Human-centered design for global health equity
506 -- 524Rezwanul Hasan Rana, Khorshed Alam, Jeff Gow. Health outcome and expenditure in low-income countries: does increasing diffusion of information and communication technology matter?
525 -- 550Frank Nyame-Asiamah. Improving the 'manager-clinician' collaboration for effective healthcare ICT and telemedicine adoption processes - a cohered emergent perspective
551 -- 576Judy van Biljon. Knowledge mobilization of human-computer interaction for development research: core issues and domain questions
577 -- 590Julia Bello-Bravo, Eric Abbott, Sostino Mocumbe, Ricardo Maria, Robert Mazur, Barry R. Pittendrigh. An 89% solution adoption rate at a two-year follow-up: evaluating the effectiveness of an animated agricultural video approach
591 -- 606Fanos Mekonnen Birke, Andrea Knierim. ICT for agriculture extension: actor network theory for understanding the establishment of agricultural knowledge centers in South Wollo, Ethiopia
607 -- 635Amrita Chatterjee. Financial inclusion, information and communication technology diffusion, and economic growth: a panel data analysis

Volume 26, Issue 2

201 -- 213Sajda Qureshi. Why Data Matters for Development? Exploring Data Justice, Micro-Entrepreneurship, Mobile Money and Financial Inclusion
214 -- 233Jonathan Cinnamon. Data inequalities and why they matter for development
234 -- 267Sylvain K. Cibangu. Marginalization of indigenous voices in the information age: a case study of cell phones in the rural Congo
268 -- 291Yee Kwan Tang, Victor Konde. Differences in ICT use by entrepreneurial micro-firms: evidence from Zambia
292 -- 315Alejandro Cataldo, Gabriel Pino, Robert J. McQueen. Size matters: the impact of combinations of ICT assets on the performance of Chilean micro, small and medium enterprises
316 -- 345Samwel Macharia Chege, Daoping Wang, Shaldon Leparan Suntu. Impact of information technology innovation on firm performance in Kenya
346 -- 368Xiaoqing Li, Xiaogang He, Yifeng Zhang. The impact of social media on the business performance of small firms in China
369 -- 393Devendra Dilip Potnis, Aakanksha Gaur, Jang Bahadur Singh. Analysing slow growth of mobile money market in India using a market separation perspective
394 -- 420Abhipsa Pal, Tejaswini C. Herath, Rahul De', H. Raghav Rao. Contextual facilitators and barriers influencing the continued use of mobile payment services in a developing country: insights from adopters in India
421 -- 444Syed Abidur Rahman, Mirza Mohammad Didarul Alam, Seyedeh Khadijeh Taghizadeh. Do mobile financial services ensure the subjective well-being of micro-entrepreneurs? An investigation applying UTAUT2 model

Volume 26, Issue 1

1 -- 37Narcyz Roztocki, Piotr Soja, Heinz Roland Weistroffer. Enterprise systems in transition economies: research landscape and framework for socioeconomic development
38 -- 53Chang Bin Lee. Qualitative analysis of cultural tourism websites of municipalities in Taiwan
54 -- 88Farrukh Saleem, Naomie Salim, Abdulrahman H. Altalhi, Zahid Ullah, Abdullah Al-Malaise Al-Ghamdi, Zahid Mahmood Khan. Assessing the effects of information and communication technologies on organizational development: business values perspectives
89 -- 107Giselle Rampersad, Indrit Troshani. Impact of high-speed broadband on innovation in rural firms
108 -- 127Marthe Uwamariya, Claudia Loebbecke. Learning from the mobile payment role model: lessons from Kenya for neighboring Rwanda
128 -- 145Walter Mayer, Gary Madden, Chen Wu. Broadband and economic growth: a reassessment
146 -- 161David Asamoah, Samer Takieddine, Mawuli Amedofu. Examining the effect of mobile money transfer (MMT) capabilities on business growth and development impact
162 -- 179Chun Liu 0005, Lian Wang. Not every line is connected equally: evidence from Deyang's mobile users
180 -- 193Gina Porter, Kate R. Hampshire, Albert Abane, Alister Munthali, Elsbeth Robson, Ariane De Lannoy, Augustine Tanle, Samuel Owusu. Mobile phones, gender, and female empowerment in sub-Saharan Africa: studies with African youth
194 -- 200Geoff Walsham. Health information systems in developing countries: some reflections on information for action