Bottom of the Data Pyramid: Big Data and the Global South

Authors

  • Payal Arora Erasmus University Rotterdam

Keywords:

big data, Global South, bottom of the pyramid, biometric identities, inclusive capitalism, crowdsourcing, database, democracy

Abstract

To date, little attention has been given to the impact of big data in the Global South, about 60% of whose residents are below the poverty line. Big data manifests in novel and unprecedented ways in these neglected contexts. For instance, India has created biometric national identities for her 1.2 billion people, linking them to welfare schemes, and social entrepreneurial initiatives like the Ushahidi project that leveraged crowdsourcing to provide real-time crisis maps for humanitarian relief. While these projects are indeed inspirational, this article argues that in the context of the Global South there is a bias in the framing of big data as an instrument of empowerment. Here, the poor, or the “bottom of the pyramid” populace are the new consumer base, agents of social change instead of passive beneficiaries. This neoliberal outlook of big data facilitating inclusive capitalism for the common good sidelines critical perspectives urgently needed if we are to channel big data as a positive social force in emerging economies. This article proposes to assess these new technological developments through the lens of databased democracies, databased identities, and databased geographies to make evident normative assumptions and perspectives in this under-examined context.

Author Biography

Payal Arora, Erasmus University Rotterdam

Payal Arora PhD is the (co)author/editor of a number of books including Dot Com Mantra: Social Computing in the Central Himalayas (Ashgate 2010), The Leisure Commons: A Spatial History of Web 2.0 (Routledge, 2014, awarded the EUR Fellowship), Crossroads in New Media, Identity & Law (Palgrave 2015), and the forthcoming Poor@Play: Digital life beyond the West (Harvard University Press). She is the Founder and Executive Director of Catalyst Lab, where academia, business, and the public dialogue through social media. She sits on several boards including Columbia’s Earth Institute Connect to Learn, Technology, Knowledge & Society Association and The World Women Global Council in New York. She has held Fellow positions at GE, NYU, and Rio’s Institute of Technology and Society. She is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of Media and Communication at Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands.

Downloads

Additional Files

Published

2016-03-14

Issue

Section

Articles