Community contributions

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This is the list of research questions for the Berkman/UNICEF project about child online safety in the developing world. A first step of the project is to gather information about the existing research and work that has been done in this area. The following questions address those areas about which we are most interested; we encourage you to contribute to this wiki by adding your responses below. Alternatively, we would also welcome responses by email to ldyson@cyber.law.harvard.edu.

Please note: we remove any personally identifying information from this forum to keep responses anonymous. Any responses including information such as names, email addresses, etc. should be sent to the email address above. We may include some of your thoughts on this page, but we will ensure that all identifying factors are removed.


Existing Tools: research, education modules, studies

Are you aware of specific studies commissioned about Internet safety for children in developing nations, particularly those that aren't in English?

  • As you note, this is a very unexplored topic in the research community. It is something I am always asked about when I speak with Ministries of Education, however. Most of these questions related somehow to ‘keeping girls safe’. With this in mind, I wonder if some of the gender-related ICT studies looking at developing countries might contain some attention to these issues?

Are you aware of any additional information or resources relevant to this topic? This might include studies, education modules, initiatives, conferences, or anecdotal evidence.

  • In my experience, the best way to protect young people in the developing world is to incorporate existing structures of accountability into their online communities. Making sure that all participants feel as responsible for their contributions and interactions online as they do for their public behavior makes a big difference. Incorporating a few influential/powerful people into a given program to incentivize good behavior can go a long way.

Is this issue a perceived threat or is the focus of most organizations simply on getting children access to technology, without an included safety component?

  • Most groups are focused on access, yes.
  • The threat is real. Many organizations are being incredibly reckless.
  • [A recently proposed bill in Brazil (approved by the Senate and currently under consideration by the Congress), called Lei Azeredo] was not really about child-protection. However, it was incorrectly presented to the Senate and Congress as such, demonstrating the political strength of online child-protection in Brazil. That was actually one side of the criticism against the bill, the fact that it was leveraging on child-protection issues, in order to approve an unrelated (and unbalanced) cybercrime bill.

High-risk groups and online threats

Much of the research on developed nations identifies certain children as high-risk for being harmed by Internet-related content or contact, though we have not found any analogous studies for risk factors in developing countries. Are you aware of any reports on what would constitute risk factors for Internet safety in developing nations?

  • How would it not be age, gender, socio-economic status and strength of family structure?

To your knowledge, to what extent do the factors that increase risk for children in the developed world also apply to those children in the developing world?

If access to technologies is particularly low in certain nations or if use is distinctly different (for example, if children only have access to computers in schools rather than at home), children may not face all of the dangers that exist in developed nations or may face new potentially problematic situations. How are issues that have been documented in the developed world, like bullying and sexual predation, experienced differently, or similarly, in the developing world? Are there significant differences (cultural or practical), or are they the same problems in a new space?

  • Another big question! One very relevant issue is different conceptions of what ‘privacy’ means, especially as it relates to young people. In countries with more authoritarian governments, the possibility of children facing threats from their own government as a result of their Internet/mobile phone use is perhaps greater than in OECD countries.
  • The two other issues I see raised time and again in Asia are cyber-isolation and Internet addiction. For what it’s worth, both cyberbullying and cyber-isolation are topics of much research in Korea and Japan. I was at an international conference where these topics were mentioned prominently in *every* presentation from every researcher from these countries (and not once from researchers from any other country). The governments of these two countries have made tackling issues of cyberbullying and cyber-isolation (think of the stereotypical otaku hidden away in his room in Japan). China has made a big deal of dealing with ‘Internet addiction’, and has even set up high-profile ‘camps’ to ‘treat’ youngsters with this affliction. (This is something that Western media like to report on, it should be easy to find references.
  • Given the high frequency of sexual predation on students by teachers, I’d guess that giving teachers yet another way to leverage their power—often in a locked, private room that they control—will lead to more abuses of that power. Also, the potential to create exploitative pornography of impoverished young women is quite high.

How does cultural relativism affect how people perceive risks online (for example, parental pressure for youth to participate in online sexual activities for money)? Do you know of any regionally unique issues (for example, the use of mobile technologies by Caribbean youth to arrange to meet on buses to have sexual intercourse)?

  • I think it will not take people in poor countries long to realize that the easiest way to monetize their new technology is by exploiting their young people with different sorts of web and digital cameras.
  • There was an interesting chapter on the use of mobile phones among youth in West Africa for this sort of thing in a book a few years ago edited by James Katz of Rutgers. In many African countries, the seemingly intractable problem of teachers demanding sex from girls in exchange for better marks is bound to have its online/SMS equivalents.

Technology access and the future

We are interested in exploring questions of current and future access to technology. Have you observed any trends in technological usage and behavior amongst young people in developing countries?

  • More and more internet cafes. More and more young Africans on social networking sites.
  • Mobile use among youth in the Middle East is particularly interesting, especially the use of bluetooth to enable young people to be in contact with each other outside of parental supervision.

What kind of risks may emerge, or recede, as ICTs become available to a wider group of people?

  • Indeed, I think that what happens over the mobile phone (whether it will be the mobile web or SMS or something else entirely) will be most important for youth in developing countries. The explosion in broadband connectivity in Eastern and Southern Africa that we are on the cusp of experiencing might be a good ‘hook’ for some of your research. I note that the use of things like Facebook among university students in Kenya has been very strong even though connectivity has been so poor and expensive – I imagine that this use will explode once access is opened up to broader groups of young people, as we are going to see shortly.
  • I would say the risks of children falling victim to other types of crimes (fraud, theft, etc.) will increase.

Your work

Have you done any work that directly intersects with any of these issues? If so, what were relevant issues and what were the outputs from the work?

Have any of your colleagues or peers worked on projects that directly intersect with any of these issues?

Your thoughts

What are the most pressing issues and problems in this area?

  • I fear the use of cheap donated laptops (with inbuilt webcams) for the creation of exploitative pornographic material. I also fear the easiness with which adults and children can arrange to meet one another for sexual activities when they are brought into a site with unmoderated/unsupervised intra mail and chat.

What do you think would work best? (e. g. Would a curricular intervention work - if so, what might it look like? Are there any feasible technical interventions?)

  • I think it is essential to prepare young people for the sort of predation that they may be subjected to. Teen Angels and Icouldbe.org are both working on material of this variety.

Who are the key players that should be engaged in this process? Do you have any recommendations for people or organizations with whom we should be in contact?

Most of all, we want to gather real reports and observations about these issues from people who have firsthand experience. Have you, personally, observed any instances of online risks affecting children in developing countries?

  • I moderate a site where I see somewhat off-color remarks from teachers to students. I delete these remarks and reprimand teachers. So far so good.

What is the dominant narrative of online or mobile risk in the country in which you work (for example, boys pressuring girls for sexual favors vs. predatory threats)?