Mobile phones and Gender Empowerment: Enactment of 'Restricted Agency'

The Capability Approach, as developed by Amartya Sen, has been criticized for an overly individualistic approach, while simultaneously being re-framed in alignment with the dominant social structure. We situate individual agency within the frame of social power structures, examining agency and empowerment gained by mobile phone usage from 26 Vietnamese foreign brides in Singapore. We use an intersectionality perspective from gender studies to find that, while facing multiple grounds of discrimination from the dominant group, the women constantly negotiate at the intersections of gender, ethnicity and social class, leading to two active strategies for positive well-being and empowerment: Essentialization of gender and Aspiration. The mobile phone was found to be an active agent in facilitating their aspiration for individual changes, autonomy, and more powerful decision making roles in domestic and social domains - a variety of communicative practices developed their capabilities. On the other hand, Mobiles also mediated the enactment and practices of the foreign brides' essential beliefs of their own idealized femininity and traditional gender roles, in contrast with the dominant development discourse of women's empowerment. The socio-cultural contexts influencing processes of technological appropriation is discussed from the perspective of development, particularly re-framing Western notions of gender equality within the agentic framework.

[1]  S. Fukuda‐Parr THE HUMAN DEVELOPMENT PARADIGM: OPERATIONALIZING SEN'S IDEAS ON CAPABILITIES , 2003 .

[2]  A. Sen,et al.  Social exclusion : concept, application, and scrutiny , 2000 .

[3]  Juliane Jung,et al.  The Practice Of Everyday Life , 2016 .

[4]  Sirpa Tenhunen,et al.  Mobile technology in the village: ICTs, culture, and social logistics in India , 2008 .

[5]  Åke Grönlund,et al.  Development as freedom – how the Capability Approach can be used in ICT4D research and practice , 2012, Inf. Technol. Dev..

[6]  Sajda Qureshi,et al.  Are we making a Better World with Information and Communication Technology for Development (ICT4D) Research? Findings from the Field and Theory Building , 2015, Inf. Technol. Dev..

[7]  Cecilia Ng,et al.  Gender and the Digital Economy , 2005 .

[8]  Sophia Huyer,et al.  Cinderella or Cyberella?: Empowering Women in the Knowledge Society , 2006 .

[9]  Rachel Parker,et al.  Can Emerging Technologies Make a Difference in Development , 2012 .

[10]  J. Church Human Development Report , 2001 .

[11]  S. Mitter,et al.  Gender and the digital economy : perspectives from the developing world , 2005 .

[12]  Erwin A. Alampay Beyond access to ICTs: Measuring capabilities in the information society , 2006 .

[13]  Govind Kelkar,et al.  Gender Relations and Technological Change in Asia , 2002 .

[14]  Liesbet van Zoonen,et al.  Feminist media studies , 1994 .

[15]  Yingqin Zheng,et al.  Inequality of what? Social exclusion in the e-society as capability deprivation , 2008, Inf. Technol. People.

[16]  Naziat Choudhury The Question of Empowerment: Women’s Perspective on Their Internet Use , 2009 .

[17]  Arul Chib,et al.  Migrant mothering and mobile phones: Negotiations of transnational identity , 2014 .

[18]  Kate Crawford,et al.  Meaningful Mobility , 2012 .

[19]  P. Vigneswara Ilavarasan,et al.  Mattering Matters: Agency, Empowerment, and Mobile Phone Use by Female Microentrepreneurs , 2015, Inf. Technol. Dev..

[20]  E. C. Thompson,et al.  Thai wives in Singapore and transnational patriarchy , 2013 .

[21]  N. Kabeer Resources, Agency, Achievements: Reflections on the Measurement of Women's Empowerment , 1999 .

[22]  Leopoldina Fortunati Gender and the Mobile Phone , 2009 .

[23]  Rivka Ribak,et al.  PLAYING WITH FIRE: On the domestication of the mobile phone among Palestinian teenage girls in Israel , 2008 .

[24]  Sophia Huyer,et al.  Women and gender in ict statistics and indicators for development , 2008 .

[25]  Amartya Sen,et al.  Gender Inequality in Human Development: Theories and Measurement , 1995 .

[26]  K. Crenshaw Demarginalizing the Intersection of Race and Sex: A Black Feminist Critique of Antidiscrimination Doctrine, Feminist Theory and Antiracist Politics , 1989 .

[27]  R. Alsop,et al.  Measuring Empowerment in Practice: Structuring Analysis and Framing Indicators , 2005 .

[28]  N. Hafkin,et al.  Gender information technology and developing countries: an analytic study. Executive summary. , 2001 .

[29]  Richard Heeks,et al.  Researching ICT-based enterprise for women in developing countries: an enterprise perspective , 2004 .

[30]  Conny Roggeband,et al.  Paradoxes of Intersectionality: Theorizing Inequality in the Dutch Police Force through Structure and Agency , 2010 .

[31]  Vikas Nath,et al.  Empowerment and Governance through Information and Communication Technologies: Women’s Perspective , 2001 .

[32]  Øystein Sæbø,et al.  Building collective capabilities through ICT in a mountain region of Nepal: where social capital leads to collective action , 2012, Inf. Technol. Dev..

[33]  Robert A. Pollak,et al.  Rationality and Social Choice , 1986 .

[34]  M. Turshen Development as Freedom , 2001 .

[35]  Abigail See Shyang Ling,et al.  ICT influence on foreign wives' social integration into Singaporean society , 2012, ICEC '12.

[36]  Dorothea Kleine,et al.  The capability approach and the ‘medium of choice’: steps towards conceptualising information and communication technologies for development , 2011, Ethics and Information Technology.

[37]  J. Leu,et al.  Culture, Essentialism, Immigration and Representations of Gender , 2005 .

[38]  M. Smith,et al.  Mobile Phones and Expanding Human Capabilities , 2011 .

[39]  S. Africa,et al.  Promote Gender Equality and Empower Women , 2006 .

[40]  Rajiv George Aricat,et al.  Belonging and communicating in a bounded cosmopolitanism: the role of mobile phones in the integration of transnational migrants in Singapore , 2017 .

[41]  H. Horst,et al.  The Cell Phone: An Anthropology of Communication , 2006 .

[42]  S. Davis Empowering women weavers? the internet in rural morocco , 2008 .

[43]  S. Bailur,et al.  Negotiating Women’s Agency through ICTs: A Comparative Study of Uganda and India , 2015 .

[44]  Richard Heeks,et al.  Researching ICT-Based Enterprise for Women in Developing Countries: A Gender Perspective , 2010 .

[45]  Globalization, ICTs, and Economic Empowerment: A Feminist Critique , 2004 .

[46]  B. Yeoh,et al.  Commercially arranged marriage and the negotiation of citizenship rights among Vietnamese marriage migrants in multiracial Singapore , 2013 .

[47]  Sophia Huyer,et al.  Women, ICT and the information society: global perspectives and initiatives , 2005, CWIT '05.

[48]  J. Donner Blurring Livelihoods and Lives: The Social Uses of Mobile Phones and Socioeconomic Development , 2009, Innovations: Technology, Governance, Globalization.

[49]  D. Kandiyoti BARGAINING WITH PATRIARCHY , 1988, Feminist Theory Reader.

[50]  Arul Chib,et al.  Midwives with mobiles: A dialectical perspective on gender arising from technology introduction in rural Indonesia , 2011, New Media Soc..

[51]  Heather A. Horst,et al.  Mobile communication in the global south , 2011, New Media Soc..

[52]  Ange-Marie Hancock,et al.  When Multiplication Doesn't Equal Quick Addition: Examining Intersectionality as a Research Paradigm , 2007, Perspectives on Politics.

[53]  J. Donner,et al.  A review of evidence on mobile use by micro and small enterprises in developing countries , 2010 .

[54]  Jon Elster,et al.  Sour Grapes: Studies in the Subversion of Rationality , 1985 .

[55]  Vu Song Ha,et al.  Constructions of gender in Vietnam: In pursuit of the ‘Three Criteria’ , 2006, Culture, health & sexuality.

[56]  M. Thompson Discourse, ‘Development’ & the ‘Digital Divide’: ICT & the World Bank , 2004 .

[57]  Lana F. Rakow,et al.  Remote mothering and the parallel shift: Women meet the cellular telephone , 1993 .

[58]  Dorothea Kleine,et al.  POLICY ARENA ICT4WHAT?— USING THE CHOICE FRAMEWORK TO OPERATIONALISE THE CAPABILITY APPROACH TO DEVELOPMENT , 2010 .

[59]  Fabienne Peter,et al.  GENDER AND THE FOUNDATIONS OF SOCIAL CHOICE: THE ROLE OF SITUATED AGENCY , 2003 .

[60]  A. Bhavnani,et al.  The role of mobile phones in sustainable rural poverty reduction , 2008 .

[62]  Desa Goal 3: Promote gender equality and empower women , 2016 .

[63]  A. Choi,et al.  Social disapproval of wife assults: a national survey of Singapore. , 1996 .

[64]  Usha Nair-Reichert,et al.  Empowering women through ict-based business initiatives: An overview of best practices in e-commerce/e-retailing projects , 2008 .

[65]  A. Sen,et al.  Equality of What? , 1980, Seven Deadly Economic Sins.

[66]  Arul Chib,et al.  International Migrant Workers’ Use of Mobile Phones to Seek Social Support in Singapore , 2013 .