This chapter explores the use of digital technologies to measure and alleviate poverty, and the implications for rights. Until now the field of development has mainly paid attention to those rights explicitly connected to digital communications, such as informational privacy and freedom of expression. We argue that instead, with new data sources such as mobile phones and internet use, a fundamental change is occurring in the way poverty is addressed. This change has implications for a wide range of rights, including economic, political, social and cultural rights, and implies that development actors should not address digital technologies as neutral. Instead they are ways of seeing, knowing and engaging with livelihoods and poverty that are not inherently benevolent and may be exploitative. In order to contribute to poverty alleviation, digital technologies and the global data economy must be understood in relation to the power and information asymmetries they (re)produce<p></p>
History
Published in
Research Handbook on Human Rights and Poverty (Second Edition)
This is a draft chapter/article. The final version will be available in Research Handbook on Human Rights and Poverty (Second Edition) edited by [insert editor(s) or author(s)], forthcoming 20xx, Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd.
The material cannot be used for any other purpose without further permission of the publisher, and is for private use only
Publication date
2025-12-31
Language
en
Editor(s)
Davis M ; Kjaerum M ; Lyons A
Depositor
Dr Hellen Mukiri-Smith. Deposit date: 23 October 2025