Trends in China’s Transition Toward a Knowledge Economy

Asian Survey, 2005

This essay identifies critical trends in the evolution of information technology sectors in China. Chinese policymakers will have to make decisions in four areas that will shape the knowledge economy and may help transform China from being a technology market taker to a market maker. Read More »

CHINA’S INFLUENCE IN AFRICA: Implications for U.S. Policy

Testimony before the Sub-Committee on Arica, Human Rights and International Operations, 2005
U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

Divining U.S. interests out of the intersections of China and Africa is truly a daunting challenge. We are dealing with more than 50 African countries, each quite different from the others, and each with different relations with China; we are tracking and evaluating half a dozen critical foreign policy issues, from petroleum to foreign aid; and from this mix we then try to distill answers to the question- “So what? What should America do, if anything, about the influence of China in Africa?” Let me take up each of these in turn. Read More »

Engaged Scholars and Thoughtful Practitioners: Enhancing Their Dialogue in the Knowledge Society

Information Technologies and International Development, 2005

An irony of the current stage of the global information revolution is the contradiction we observe between the rhetoric of cooperation and the realities of conflict among the stakeholders. Read More »

Chapter 4: South Africa

Negotiating the Net, 2005

Chapter 7: Kenya

Negotiating the Net, 2005

Chapter 9: Ghana

Negotiating the Net, 2005

What is Internet Governance and Where Does it Come From?

Journal of Public Policy, 2005

The literature on governing the Internet suffers from such lacunae as overly narrow, technocratic conceptions of Internet governance; insufficient attention to governance dynamics within countries; and limited appreciation for the micro-level political and social roots of governance. This essay suggests ways they may be addressed by asking two foundational questions ‘What is Internet governance and where does it come from?’ Read More »

LEADERSHIP IN THE DIGITAL AGE

The Encyclopedia of Leadership, 2004

Different epochs produce different kinds of leadership – with different patterns of hierarchical authority, different skill sets and attitudes, and different institutional incentives. Societies today are experiencing significant changes potentially as far reaching as the transition from agricultural to industrial societies. Today’s epoch is in the early stages of a transition from an industrial based society to a post industrial, digital society, and leadership patterns are beginning to reflect that transition. Read More »

MINORITY PARTICIPATION IN THE SENIOR RANKS OF INTERNATIONALLY-ORIENTED PROFESSIONS

CIDCM, 2003

Evidence of the status of minorities in the upper echelons of American public and private life, as reflected in their shares of total positions in several leading sectors with strong international links.

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African information revolution: a balance sheet

Telecommunications Policy, 2003

This paper provides a policy and institutional framework to describe and analyze the diffusion of information technology and the global information revolution (IR) in Sub-Saharan Africa and the major factors that influence this diffusion. We begin by examining regional diffusion and find substantial crossnational diffusion differences across the continent, with considerable variation in regional diffusion of telephone, internet, radio, and television. This pattern undermines technologic and economic explanations as sole determinants of variation in diffusion. Then we conduct an analysis of the IR in Sub-Saharan Africa based on a policy framework. This framework identifies four key policy balances (1. public and private initiatives, 2. monopoly and competition ‘‘markets’’, 3. domestic and foreign ownership or control, and 4. centralized and de-centralized administrative controls) as important elements to a better understanding of the diffusion of the IR. We find that a necessary condition for an explanation of the diffusion of the IR is a policy and institutional framework that incorporates these four balances. Read More »