Martin Hall (by way of t byfield) on Mon, 22 Feb 1999 20:23:41 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Virtual University/Segregated Highway? [1 of 2] |
[forwarded and de-HTMLified by t byfield with permission (errors are his); endnotes are in part 2] <http://www.meg.uct.ac.za/martin/paper3.htm> Virtual University/Segregated Highway? The Politics of Connectivity Education and Technology in the Commonwealth: Making the Transition. Parallel Convention, 13th Commonwealth Conference of Education Ministers, Gaborone, Botswana. [part 1 of 2] This paper is about the possibilities of information and communication technology in higher education at the far end of the Internet, where the web of connectivity has only tenuous links [1]. But I will start with one of those beguiling hypertext links, casually made and pursued through labyrinth of the World Wide Web, that illustrates some of the paradoxes of the "information revolution". Kenji Kawakami, the designer of the Tokyo Bicycle Museum, is well known in Japan as the originator of the art of Chindogu, the almost-useless object, literally the "weird tool". As an archaeologist [2], I have a certain affection for such perversions of the material world, and Kawakami's book, 101 Un-Useless Japanese Inventions, is the sort of gift that archaeologists give one another, along with Flattened Fauna and Bluff your Way in Archaeology. And Kawakami does not disappoint his reader. Over 150 or so pages he provides colour illustrations and straight-faced descriptions of material marginalia that include the Telephone Dumbbell ("increases fitness and reduces phone bills"), the Full Body Umbrella ("for day-long all-over dryness") and the Ice Stopper ("protects the drinker's nose and lip from floating ice"). 101 Un-Useless Japanese Inventions is the sort of book that could be expected to bring its publishers a small profit and its author a trickle of royalties, catching the eye of bookshop browsers looking for low-priced humour [3]. But there is more to Chindogu than a modest print run for the novelty trade. A search of the Internet reveals more than 50 Web sites. Kawakami sees Chindogu as "man-made objects that have broken free from the chains of usefulness ... the freedom to challenge the suffocating historical dominance of conservative utility ... the spirit of anarchy". His credo has been taken to heart by, among others, the International Chindogu Society and its President, Dan Papia, whose colour portrait ("as seen on TV!!!") launches the Society's Home Page. Papia, a one-time financial journalist and translator of Kawakami's book from Japanese to English, now runs a video distribution business. He greets his virtual visitors with a rousing "Hey, buccarroos!", warns that chin should not be mistranslated as "penis", and offers membership at $10 and "real-live pictures and descriptions of chindogu into your home". One of Kawakami's "Ten Tenets" is that "Chindogu are not tradable commodities ... if you accept money for one you surrender your purity ... they must not even be sold as a joke". Papia remains true to this principle; as with the book, all that can be acquired through the Home Page are virtual images. However, the International Chindogu Society is in partnership with Orangutan Records and offers links here, and to Oriental Computing and a page titled "Chon Wolson". Orangutan Records currently features Bag of Cows (Boy on drums, Jungo on guitar and vocals by Pigrot, tracks "Tie me Up" and "Reign of Terror", recorded in Tokyo) offered, somewhat archaically, on a 7 inch 45 RMP record directly by e-mail. Oriental Computing provides Japanese and Chinese language shareware links, while clicking on Chon Wilson profiles the Japanese soprano, "the only singer to perform on both sides of the 38th parallel" who performed the title role in Carmen at Seoul's Palace of the Arts, uniting North and South Korea and Japan before an audience of 1300 to mark the 50th anniversary of the end of World War II. Chon Wolson's new CD can be purchased directly from Orangutan Records "for the low low price of $10 including shipping and handling". The International Chindogu Society, Orangutan Records, Oriental Computing and the Chon Wolson page have more in common than their http links; they are all originate in a personal page belonging to Christopher Titus North of Pocussett Street, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Fluent in Japanese, North is a graduate of Sophia University, Tokyo, where he wrote a Masters thesis on North Korean politics. He now works as a translator for a Japanese international financial corporation and doubles up as a PhD student in the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Pittsburgh. His page, which features photographs of his son Shunchan, resides on the University of Pittsburgh's server at www.pitt.edu, and suggests a visit to the East Asian library, where other interesting information may be found [4]. This brief and arbitrarily chosen excursion along the super-highway illustrates rather nicely some of the implications and contradictions of information technology that I will dwell on in this paper. On the one hand there is a breathtaking globalization; from the London of HarperCollins's paperback to Kawakami's Tokyo and then to a direct-mail outlet in Pittsburgh, all with little discernable concession to the constraints of time and space. The apparent democracy of connectivity and the generosity of free Chindogu images carries the subtle persuasiveness of online advertising and the international music industry, seeming to confirm the grim suspicions of critics of international capitalism. But at the same time there is an anarchic individualism in the spirit of Kawakami's madcap inventions taken up by a part-time graduate student in Pittsburgh who has hijacked space on his university's server (surely the administration doesn't know what is going on?) and appeals to emigre sensibilities for Japanese punk rock and Chon Wolson's operatic Korean songs. This sort of cultural material is surely the fabric of the myriad ethnic identities and nationalism that counterbalance the forces of globalization, and make the late-twentieth century world a confusion of competing images, claims and contestations. There is a further paradox. On the one hand, the individual merges into the anonymity of the mass media. The International Chindogu Society claims thousands of members with links throughout the world, and presents Dan Papia as a NBC Dateline celebrity. Other Web links take the Internet surfer to New Zealand, Australia or the United Kingdom. But against this is the prominence of the personal -- Christopher North's "biodata" and the suite of ever larger pictures of Shunchan's face, presenting his Asian-American identity as the badge of his father's authority on matters Japanese and Korean. In comparison with the bizarre and esoteric diversions en route, the ultimate destination in this electronic journey through cyberspace is rather tame. The University of Pittsburgh's Web presence is conventional: a tour of the campus, an overview of resources and faculty, and listings of courses and requirements. Despite Christopher North's approving nod in the direction of the East Asian Library, one is reminded of Superman, fresh from circling the globe and descended into Clark Kent's drab clothes and scholarly spectacles. What can the bricks and mortar of a conventional university campus, or the bound volumes on the library's shelf, offer in comparison to the unbounded spaces of hypertext links or the opportunities of a Web page? In a way, Christopher North is rather like Superman. His homely image -- his house in Pocussett Street and snapshots of his endearing son at play -- are assembled from electronic fragments scattered throughout cyberspace, and then directed outwards again at incredible speed in defence of Korean dreams of world peace. Stuart Hall wrote about this "fragmentation of the modern individual", and the new identities that are its consequence, five years ago -- prehistory in the life of the Web: A distinctive type of structural change is transforming modern societies in the late twentieth century. This is fragmenting the cultural landscapes of class, gender, sexuality, ethnicity, race and nationality which gave us firm locations as social individuals[5]. Such processes are the essence of politics. Information technology, whether in the service of multinational corporations, governments, ethnic groups or individuals, sustains a domain in which power is exercised and resistance organized. And, given that knowledge is information, there is an inescapable connection between information technology and the university -- now, and increasingly in the future. There are a myriad ways of looking at this relationship. Here, I am concerned with the implications of information technology for the politics of knowledge in Africa, seen from within a university in South Africa. In some respects South Africa can stand as a case study for the continent, and in many other respects it cannot. The problems faced by "historically disadvantaged" universities are very similar to the challenges to universities in other countries in sub-Saharan Africa. But other educational institutions in South Africa have been privileged as the beneficiaries of decades of segregation, and now face crises of a different nature. Whatever the complexities of these similarities and differences, there can be no doubt that South Africa's role in the politics of Africa's connectivity to the electronic world is now central; since the 1994 elections opened new political possibilities, South Africa has emerged unambiguously as the hub of the continent's telecommunications. In an unlikely conversation, but one that is its quite permissible to engineer in our virtual world, we can imagine Noam Chomsky and James D. Wolfensohn in debate about the consequences of this situation. Wolfensohn, President of the World Bank, argues from Toronto that information technology can power development, overcome the gap between rich and poor and dissolve gender inequities. Chomsky, perpetual critic of capitalism, counters from Cape Town that globalization is a chimera -- a conspiracy to enrich the North at the expense of the South [6]. While I am drawn to Chomsky's suspicions and other discontented critics of the "new" economic order, I also believe that matters are complicated -- that there are new possibilities and fresh dangers. I would want to use the democracy of the Internet to butt in and insist on an archaeologist's view. This would be that that the material and social worlds are inexorably interconnected. From the beginning of the Stone Age, when the first implements were hesitantly fashioned, technology, society and the material signification of identity have been intertwined. The same will apply to the "Information Age". Technology -- including Information Technology -- can never be neutral. It is always implicated in some form of power, whether over the environment or in relation to other people, and therefore always has a politics. In considering the possibilities of information and communication technology, higher education planners in Africa have in front of them both strategic opportunities and the dangers of wrong choices. Investment in information technology could be liberatory, allowing accelerated promotion along the developmental line. But it could also buy a monumental Chindogu. *** Just how connected is Africa? Shahid Akhtar and Luc Laviolette briefed the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa in 1995, and their assessment remains the consensus today: Africa's information infrastructure is by far the least developed in the world. Technical statistics consistently show that Africans have the smallest number of telephone lines per capita, the most restricted access to computer equipment, the most primitive information networks, and the most inaccessible medias ystems[7]. But this is to exclude South Africa, to follow the mode of the '80s when the political cordon sanitaire westwards from the Limpopo constrained interaction, and to foster a strange ambiguity. Thus in the politics of information flow South Africa can be a representative of Akhtar and Laviolette's marginalised continent, with Deputy President Thabo Mbeki giving the keynote address on behalf of the "developing world" at the G-7 Ministerial Conference on the Information Society in Brussels in February 1995. Yet at the same time South Africa has an IT infrastructure in the finance and retail sectors that is comparable to Europe's, advanced cellular communications and a substantial community of Internet subscribers [8]. To consider the issue of connectivity in Africa without taking South Africa's role into account is like trying to understand a network while ignoring the existence of its file-server. Estimating the size of the Internet, either in whole or in part, is notoriously difficult and likely to become more so, with the increasing use of "virtual hosts" and the geographical mobility of top-level domains. Nevertheless, a widely accepted estimate for January 1997 was a total of 16.14 million hosts in the world; an increase of 3 million hosts over the preceding six month period, continuing the pattern of exponential growth [9]. South Africa was ranked 16th in the world in terms of absolute numbers of hosts recognized by national domains. This placed it in a category with Spain, Denmark, Austria and New Zealand, and clearly distinct from countries which would be described as "developing". South Africa would be still higher if a correction for population size were to be made. But the contrast with the rest of Africa is stark. As Table One shows, South Africa has 96% of the continent's hosts and Egypt a further 1.6%. The January 1997 survey listed an additional 28 African countries with between 1 and 500 hosts and more than 20 countries with no connectivity at all (although this has certainly changed through the year). The relationships between southern African Internet service providers reveal the new highways of power. Four international providers (BBN, Sprint, Global One, RGnet, UUnet USA) provide connectivity to four "first-tier" South African based providers (Internet Solution, Global One South Africa, Internet Africa, and Telkom's South African Internet Exchange). In turn, these first-tier providers sell bandwidth to some 70 secondary agents, including services in Namibia, Lesotho, Botswana, Tanzania, Mozambique, Swaziland, and Zimbabwe [10]. With the important exception of Telkom's SAIX, first-tier agencies collaborate as the Internet Service Providers Association (ISPA) and own one of the sub-continent's two peering points at the Johannesburg offices of The Internet Solution. Uninet, the South African universities' provider and the pioneer of the Internet in the region, is now a second-tier subsidiary of The Internet Solution with subsidized access to the ISPA peering point. If information is money and bandwidth the financial conduit of the twenty-first century, then it is striking how a small number of large commercial organizations have come to dominate the southern African information economy in the space of a year, with transnational connections and investments which mimic those of earlier corporations such as Anglo-American and De Beers. First round to Chomsky. South Africa 99284 Uganda 17 Egypt 1615 Mali 15 Morocco 477 Benin 9 Kenya 273 Central African Republic 6 Namibia 262 Togo 5 Swaziland 226 Niger 5 Ghana 203 Nigeria 4 Cote D'Ivoire 202 Tanzania 3 Zimbabwe 176 Guinea 2 Zambia 173 Angola 2 Senegal 69 Zaire 1 Tunisia 39 Rwanda 1 Mozambique 31 Lesotho 1 Algeria 28 Burundi 1 Botswana 24 Burkina Faso 1 Table One: Africa, Internet hosts, January 1997 (Internet Domain Survey, Network Wizards) The Political Geography of Information in Southern Africa (G Massel 1997. Reproduced with permission) It is even more difficult to measure Internet activity than it is to count hosts on the Web, but it has been estimated that there were 420 000 users in South Africa in mid 1996, growing to 500000 users in January 1997 [11]. There is no doubt that the majority of those with access are from privileged minority sectors of the population, and the extent of this privilege can be illustrated by looking at the more traditional aspect of the telecommunications infrastructure. South Africa has 9.5 main telephone lines per hundred people giving a teledensity twenty times higher than the rest of sub-Saharan Africa (Table Two). The growth of this network is higher than population growth. In addition, there are more than 500 000 cellular subscribers -- 84% of the total in the continent [12]. Along with Kenya and Morocco, South Africa is the principal hub for telecommunications in the continent, and is likely to play the major role in the future expansion of the Internet, and the realization of its possibilities. But, as with all aspects of South Africa's economy and public services, there are huge disparities within this infrastructure, rendering the majority of its population as marginalised as communities elsewhere in sub-Saharan Africa (Table Three). Thus 87.4% of whites have telephones in their homes but only 11.6% of Africans, reflecting a parallel distinction between urban and rural communities, while 47.6% of Africans in all areas have no access to any phone, compared to only 6.4% of whites. Well over half of people living in rural areas have to travel more than a kilometer to use the telephone [13], and less than 2% of main lines are payphones, further restricting access by marginal communities [14]. There can be no doubt that there are similar segregations in access to the Internet within South Africa, particularly as the provision of connections to the Internet is still closely tied to the availability of fixed lines. South Africa Rest of Sub-Saharan Africa North Africa Main lines (millions) 3.8 (32.5%) 2.6 (22.2%) 5.3 (45.3%) Teledensity (main lines per 100 people) 9.5 0.5 4.2 Cellular Subscribers 520000 (83.9%) 63554 (10.3%) 36000 (5.8%) Table Two: Telecommunications Infrastructure, 1995 (Hodge and Miller 1996, and ITU World Telecommunications Indicators) Urban Rural Total for Country Telephone at home 50.8% 5.2% 31.1% Communal telephone 14.5% 10.1% 12.6% Telephone at neighbour 7.3% 8.5% 7.8% Telephone at shop 6.9% 20.7% 12.9% No access to telephone 20.4% 55.4% 35.6% Table Three: South African Household Telecommunications Access, 1994 (Hodge and Miller 1996) There are, then, two dimensions to Africa's connectivity. At the larger scale there are major disparities between South Africa and the rest of the continent, with 99% of Internet connectivity at the extreme south or north. Within South Africa, there are huge contrasts between the urban, largely white and increasingly commercial users of information and communications technology, and rural, overwhelmingly African, communities who have only partial access to basic telecommunications. Policies for the use of information technology in higher education will need to take account of these multiple segregations. However, these disparities are compounded by a general crisis in African universities. One perspective on this crisis has been developed over the last decade by the World Bank, which published a major study in 1988 and followed this with a report by the Technical department of its Africa Region in 1992. The Bank highlights the rapid growth in the sub-Saharan university system between 1960 and the early 1990s and argues that this initial period of development has ended with enrollments beyond capacity, unsustainable expenditure, declining educational quality, graduate unemployment, weak management, and ineffective working relationships with government. The Bank argues that the universities should themselves take the initiative in reform and should diversify their financial bases through cost-recovery, student fees and "a calculated expansion of income-generating activities" [15]. The Association of African Universities has reached a similar conclusion, albeit from a different perspective. J.F. Ade Ajayi, Lameck Goma and G. Ampah Johnson, former vice-chancellors of the universities of Lagos, Zambia and Benin, also describe a steady decline through the 1980s and into the 1990s and attribute this to political uncertainty and inadequate financial support, with an increasing demand for student places that has not been matched by state subsidies: For concerned Africans anywhere and the most senior academics in the older African universities, there is indeed an unmistaken sense of loss, amounting almost to grief, as they compare the present state of their universities with the vigor, optimism and pride which these same institutions displayed twenty or thirty years ago[16]. Lack of funding, and the flight of expertise, has resulted in an ability to expand in fields such as technology and scientific research, which has left African universities unable to respond to development needs. Ajayi, Goma and Johnson see these conditions as symptomatic of an unfair global economic order -- the continuing international exploitation of Africa -- and are suspicious of a "new colonization" by international organizations such as the World Bank: Many in Africa feel that the policies of the World Bank as applied in the past, or even now, do not favour the development of African universities... It cannot be over-emphasized that only Africans can really understand the problems confronting them, and that any real solution must be developed from within. External support helps; but what Africa needs most urgently is the right African capacities... any attempt to undermine the development and progress of African universities, through negative influence by outsiders, should be seen as dangerous and quite unacceptable[17]. In many respects, the South African higher education system is distinct from higher education in countries to the north, and most studies acknowledge this by excluding South African universities from overviews of sub-Saharan Africa. South Africa's twenty-one universities are starkly divided between the "historically advantaged institutions", intended originally for white students and currently among the best resourced in the continent, and the "historically disadvantaged institutions", spawned by the segregationist philosophy of "Bantu education". This now-familiar stigmata of apartheid has been summarized by the National Commission for Higher Education the present system perpetuates an inequitable distribution of access and opportunity for students and staff along axes of race, gender, class and geographic discrimination. There are gross discrepancies in the participation rates by students from different population groups and indefensible imbalances in the ratios of black and female staff compared to whites and males. There are also vast disparities between historically black and historically white institutions in terms of facilities and capacities for teaching and research[18]. As a consequence of differences in their histories and contemporary political circumstances, the historically advantaged and historically disadvantaged universities in South Africa are experiencing different forms of the general crisis in higher education. The former face two sources of pressure. There is the demand that they contribute to the redistribution of resources in order to establish equity in the South African higher education system as a whole. In the words of the 1997 White Paper on Higher Education: South Africa's transition from minority rule and apartheid to a democratically elected government requires that all existing practices, institutions and values are viewed anew and rethought in terms of their fitness for the new era[19]. But at the same time they face the same general pressure on resources that are being experienced by similarly-structured institutions in Europe, North America and other parts of the "developed world" -- the difficulty of maintaining an acceptable standard of tertiary education in an environment of spiraling costs and with the tradition of a subsidized student fee structure. The historically disadvantaged institutions, in contrast, face the crisis of gaining access to resources that they have never been granted. In the words of Njabulo Ndebele, Vice-Chancellor of the University of the North, they have "nothing to lose but their pasts" [20]. In many respects, the crisis in South Africa's rural universities is similar to the circumstances that are faced by universities in other sub-Saharan African countries. George Subotzky has recently summarized the results of the University of the Western Cape's Education Policy Unit study of these institutions. Rural, "historically black" universities in South Africa tend to have little capacity for science, engineering or technology, or for development-related areas of study in general. There is a heavy emphasis on undergraduate teaching and low research output, and academic staff are often less qualified than those working in urban universities, particularly those privileged by apartheid. Rural South African universities share poor institutional capacity and infrastructure, and receive differential, and often discriminatory, funding [21]. There are good reasons for such similarities. Despite the tendency in most scholarship to draw clear distinctions between South Africa and the rest of the continent, Mahmood Mamdani has argued that such "exceptionalism" can be misleading. Mamdani argues that the distinction between the rural and the urban, the principal tool of colonial management, has continued throughout Africa after independence. This argument can be applied to the narrower domain of higher education, explaining how African countries have been locked into a dependency on external expertise, and why African universities have experienced a truncation of the earlier vision of science, technology and development-sustaining research. Mamdani sees apartheid as "the generic form of the colonial state in Africa"; consequently, it can be argued that South Africa's rural universities, intended for a racially-designated subservient caste, were placed in a similar role of dependency in relationship with the metropolitan centres [22]. These disparities in general resources are, quite naturally, reflected in current access to information technology [23]. Although many universities in Africa outside South Africa now have hosts on the Internet and some degree of e-mail connection, this does not generally seem to extend to a significant proportion of staff or to students, and there seems rarely to be a substantial internal network. Inside South Africa, the "historically advantaged" universities generally have extensive facilities, including a Web presence, an intranet consisting of a number of file servers, and e-mail accounts for the majority of academic staff and for varying numbers of students. The University of Cape Town, for example, with some 2000 academic and research staff and 16000 undergraduate and postgraduate students, has almost 3000 computers active on its intranet of 50 servers on a normal, term-time day. The University of the Witwatersrand, with some 17500 students, also has an intranet of some 50 file servers, and an estimated 11000 e-mail accounts, and the University of Pretoria reports 27000 students and 22000 e-mail accounts [24]. Within comparatively small degrees of variation, the other seven "historically advantaged" institutions seem to have broadly similar facilities. In contrast, the internal connectivity of the historically disadvantaged institutions is very different. The University of Zululand, for example, with over 300 academic staff and almost 8000 students, has a Web page but only 250 e-mail accounts. The University of Transkei also has a Web page and has established e-mail accounts for all its 300 academic staff and 3600 students. However, there are only some 620 computers on the campus, of which only 120 are available for students. Other universities in this category now create e-mail accounts for all their students as part of the registration process, but have very few networked workstations to allow students to make use of this facility [25]. [continued in part 2] --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl