Introduction to International Development, Practice Quiz: Chapter 22

Introduction to International Development, Practice Quiz: Chapter 22

Quiz Content

not completed
. The pragmatic view on ICTs and development argues that ________.

not completed
. ICTs provide ________.

not completed
. Older ICTs were based on ________, while newer ones are more ________.

not completed
. The pessimistic view of ICTs and development argues that ________.

not completed
. ________ technologies are those that suit the environmental, cultural, and economic contexts to which they are transferred.

not completed
. ________ is NOT an argument that we live in an "information society."

not completed
. ________ are sets of personal links between people across the world who are involved in paid or unpaid care work, such as cleaning or childcare.

not completed
. ________ is a statement that accurately reflects the social determinism view of technology.

not completed
. ________ is the focus of the economic argument that we live in an "information society."

not completed
. ________ is a statement that accurately reflects the dependency theory view on technology and development.

not completed
. Technology can be developed and transferred in a number of ways. It can also be ________.

not completed
. According to the United Nations Development Programme many technologies can be used for ________.

not completed
. The economic perspective on the information society measures the information society by the following except ________.

not completed
. The occupational argument has shifted towards ________.

not completed
. A people-centred, inclusive, and development-oriented Information Society means ________.

not completed
. New ICTs are a product of technological convergence.

not completed
. The focus of universal service policies is to promote particular availability of connections by individual households to public telecommunications networks.

not completed
. Universal access refers to a situation where every person has a reasonable means of access to a publicly available telephone.

not completed
. New ICTs are characterized by their interactivity.

not completed
. The spatial perspective is based on the informational networks that now connect locations and affect how society organizes around time and space, thereby leading to a "flat world."

not completed
. Since ICTs are tools, their impact on organizations depends on the people who design what the system is supposed to do and on how people, in the end, use it.

not completed
. Appropriate technologies typically require fewer resources, cost less, and have minimal negative impacts on the environment.

not completed
. "Earthbags" are natural building alternatives that make use of bags filled with local, natural materials.

not completed
. "Appropriate technologies" have a limited environmental impact, but they usually cost more.

not completed
. The term "appropriate technology" has its origin in the work of Manuel Castle on the kinds of technology that fit small-scale, grassroots, and community-centred organizations. These technologies are appropriate to the environmental, cultural, and economic context in which they are used.

not completed
. Technological determinism suggests that technology drives the evolution of society.

not completed
. The economic perspective on the information society derives from the work of Peter Singer.

not completed
. The occupational argument has shifted toward the distribution of occupations has shifted towards a "white-collar society" and away from industrial labour.

not completed
. As Castells explains that a network society has the "simultaneous capacity to include and exclude people as well as territories and activities."

not completed
. Optimists see the use of ICTs as a necessity that helps to encourage the sustainable development of individuals, communities, and nations.

Back to top