ECAS 2009
3rd European Conference on African Studies
Leipzig, 4 to 7 June 2009

Panel 99: Connecting technologies and social change: empirical findings and theoretical analysis (Dieter Neubert / Rijk van Dijk)

Panel Organisers: Dieter Neubert / Rijk van Dijk

The success of mobile phones in Africa highlights the fact that connecting technologies influence African every day life and may trigger off social change. The panel focuses on the articulation of connecting technologies (including social technologies) and social change and presents initial empirical results and analytical approaches from social anthropology, history and sociology.

Accepted Abstracts

Competing connections: Muslim and Christian networks across Lake Tanganyika, 1880s to 1930s
 
Membership in rural health insurance schemes in Mali - root or result of social change?
 
Studying the reproductive sphere and its social technologies in the context of changing moral landscapes in Africa
 
Products of modernity and social change: A case study of cell phones
 
Youth, mobility and mobile phones: findings from a three country study
Professional mobility and new technologies: German trained Ghanaian
 
 
Mobile phones and the commercialization of relationships in Southern Mozambique
 
Technological Dramas in the Islamic Reshaping of the Sudan
 
How mobile telephony (re)shapes the social landscape in Cameroon: a case study
The Thumb Tribe and Innovative English Usage: Creativity and Social Change in the Context of SMS Messages in Nigeria
Different social and magical technologies of dispute settlement used by Senegalese Marabouts
'Those who have money do not have spirits': Seeking sacred connections as technologies of self- and social transformation in post-apartheid South Africa