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Haddad, S. R. & Oliveira, A. (2019). Telecenters in Brazil: the need for survival despite of the evolution of cell phones. In L. Gómez Chova, A. López Martínez, & I. Candel Torres (Ed.), Proceedings of INTED2019 Conference. (pp. 7799-7808). Valencia: IATED Academy.
S. R. Haddad and A. G. Oliveira, "Telecenters in Brazil: the need for survival despite of the evolution of cell phones", in Proc. of INTED2019 Conf., L. Gómez Chova, A. López Martínez, & I. Candel Torres, Ed., Valencia, IATED Academy, 2019, pp. 7799-7808
@inproceedings{haddad2019_1732207953365, author = "Haddad, S. R. and Oliveira, A.", title = "Telecenters in Brazil: the need for survival despite of the evolution of cell phones", booktitle = "Proceedings of INTED2019 Conference", year = "2019", editor = "L. Gómez Chova, A. López Martínez, & I. Candel Torres", volume = "", number = "", series = "", doi = "10.21125/inted.2019", pages = "7799-7808", publisher = "IATED Academy", address = "Valencia", organization = "IATED", url = "https://iated.org/inted/publications" }
TY - CPAPER TI - Telecenters in Brazil: the need for survival despite of the evolution of cell phones T2 - Proceedings of INTED2019 Conference AU - Haddad, S. R. AU - Oliveira, A. PY - 2019 SP - 7799-7808 DO - 10.21125/inted.2019 CY - Valencia UR - https://iated.org/inted/publications AB - Brazil is an extremely socially unequal country, with 208 million inhabitants. Only 23.9% of the population belong to high- and middle-class strata (A and B), while 76.1% belong to the poorest ones (C, D, E). During the past two decades, Brazilian State has promoted several policies to face poverty, but it is still far way from being a country with equal opportunities regarding citizenship practices. Even though there have been improvements to promote the digital inclusion - or inclusion in the network society - of the poorest communities and people, they have been insufficient to bring social equality and fair economic development for all. Digital inclusion has been providing much more than just the use of Information and Communication Technologies copping with ICT’s technological evolution, but it also offers the possibility of users’ socialization, participating and living in the network society, thus better exercising digital citizenship. However, the widespread use of Internet-enabled mobile phones has raised questions as to whether the Telecenter program will continue to be justified. This paper aims to contribute to this debate, presenting some results of a research analysis on the use of ICT in Brazilian homes, carried out in Belo Horizonte's Telecenters (as part of a PhD Project). Findings suggest that Telecenters still provide a number of services that cell phones cannot replace, such as training courses, supervised school work development, technical support on ICT skills by digital inclusion agents and government and private online services, among others. They also point out the need for improvement in the diversification of courses offered, ICT infrastructure improvement and local Telecenters management. We highlight the importance of digital inclusion public policies as well as the need to improve Telecenters’ services, so that they may continue to fulfil an important role in promoting citizenship within low-income communities in developing countries, particularly in Brazil. ER -