Indigenous people and mobile technologies
In: Routledge studies in new media and cyberculture 31
In: Routledge Studies in New Media and Cyberculture Ser.
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- List of Figures and Tables -- 1 Framing the Indigenous Mobile Revolution -- PART I: Indigenous Mobile Technology Adoption and Theoretical Perspectives -- 2 Why Mobile? Indigenous People and Mobile Technologies at the Edge -- 3 The Case for Play in the Developing World: Lessons from Rah Island, Vanuatu -- 4 Ecosystemic Innovation for Indigenous People in Latin America -- 5 The Indigenous Digital Collectif: The Translation of Mobile Phones among the iTadian -- 6 Private Mobile Phones and Public Communication Drums in Rural Papua New Guinea -- PART II: Self-Determination for Indigenous People through Mobile Technologies -- 7 Keewaytinook Mobile: An Indigenous Community-Owned Mobile Phone Service in Northern Canada -- 8 Mojo in Remote Indigenous Communities -- 9 Mobile Technology in Indigenous Landscapes -- PART III: Mobiles for Health, Education and Development -- 10 Using Technology to Promote Health and Wellbeing among American Indian and Alaska Native Teens and young Adults -- 11 The Use of Podcasts to Improve the Pronunciation of the M& -- #257 -- ori Language and Develop Reflective Learning Skills -- 12 Integrating Multimedia in ODL Materials and Enhanced Access through Mobile Phones -- 13 Mobile Phones in Rural South Africa: Stories of Empowerment from the Siyakhula Living Lab -- 14 Socio-Economic Impacts on the Adoption of Mobile Phones by the Major Indigenous Nationalities of Nepal -- PART IV: Cultural and Language Revitalization through Mobile Technologies -- 15 Cultural Hybridity, Resilience and the Communication of Contemporary Cherokee Culture through Mobile Technologies -- 16 eToro: Appropriating ICTs for the Management of Penans' Indigenous Botanical Knowledge -- 17 Language Vitalization through Mobile and Online Technologies in British Columbia.