bumped to business class for the first time on 15hr flight Shanghai to Newark

I’ve always wanted to be one of those lucky people who get called onto to give up their economy seat for a business class seat. I fly an average of 30 flights a year = that’s 30 chances to be bumped! But it never happens to me…that is UNTIL the first time it happened to me on my 15 hour flight from shanghai to newark!

COntinental overbooked and thank god to my US Government purchased $3902 roundtrip economy refundable and changable ticket, I was chosen to be bumped up to first class! I NEVER wANT TO go back to economy! It’s luxury up here guys!

fully reclinable seats, soo much leg room you can’t even reach the leg bar, you don’t even have to touch the skin of the person next to you or wake them up if you need to use the restroom!

I was so excited about being bumped that I couldn’t even fall asleep when I tried. I just kept thinking “omg I’m in first class for the first time on a 15 hour flight- that’s awesome!” I just kept asking for wine, ice cream, and toasted warm nuts! It was so obvious I was one of those people who never fly business class and was trying to make the most of it - I think the attendants were super annoyed that I didn’t fall asleep. I loved most my swivel tv and glass plate and silverware! Here’s the description for one of our appetizers: A demitasse of duck consomme with quenelles accompanied with a savory crab cake and vegetable dumpling with sweet kiwi chili sauce. I don’t even know what half of those words really mean except for duck, vegetable, kiwi and sauce!

it was just a magical day to begin with because when I arrived at the Shanghai airport I ran into my friends Kavi and MAtt in the check-in line! ISn’t THAT CRAZY to run into your friends that you had NO Idea you would see? I knew they were in the country and I had hung out with them 3 weeks earlier in Beijing - but we both didn’t know that each other was going to fly out of Shanghai and into Newark on the same day! Well actually I was supposed to fly out a week later but had to change my ticket cuz of family stuff - so even crazier!

all I can say is that first class is better than my own home. I never wanted to land. I loved being served food and wine every 5min. It was awesome.

My favorite desserts in the dessert capital of China - Shanghai Sweets!

Shanghai is the sweets capital of china.
Shanghai is where my sweet tooth is fulfilled.

These two yummy glutenous balls of rice sticky love made me drool in my dream.

The first pair is a watermelon seed crusted squishy yummy ricy balls with warm coconut juice.

The second row is a perserved egg ball in taro shell with salty egg crusting.

YUMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM I ordered an extra plate JUST for myself!  YUM yUM YUM!!!

Last Days of Guowang Hutong in Beijing

Guowang Hutong is being torn down. I am not sure what will be built in its place. Since it’s located in a very popular tourist part of Beijing, Nanluogouxian and Houhai, I highly doubt they will build highrises.

Beijing’s hutongs are disappearing very quickly. The ones that remain are located in tourist parts of Beijing and most owners have sold//rented their hutong to a cafe, restaurant or shop.

For example, Fangjia Hutong, across from Yonghegong Temple has been turned into a hotel, restaurant, and architecture and artist studios.

I really should talk to Melissa Rock - a Fulbright scholar from U. Penn who is living in Beijing and documenting the relocation process of residents of hutongs located within the  2nd ring.

Goodbye Guowang hutong - I wonder what you will look like when I come back next year!

Butt-crack Ceative Advertising of Luxury Items

These are advertisement for luxury items (watch, belt, sunglasses) for a men’s magzine, Officiel Hommes China.  ARe these ads more indicative of China’s increasing interests in butts or luxury items?

Pooping Culture in China: intestinal taoism

This is a drawing that I saw hung up inside the women’s bathroom of a veggie restaurant/buffet across from Yongehe Gong temple in Beijing, China.

translation of the poster:

keep your intestines clean. you still have secular things to do in the real world. so leave the heavens temporarily

The best part is that she’s a got a cigarette in her hand while she’s pooping AND it looks likes she’s massaging her tummy.

I'm on Fire!: Experiencing the Stomach-Burning Medicial Treatment in China

It’s 1 month into my life in Beijing, China and I am on the quest to become healthier. One of things that I have done this past week is the Stomach Fireburning. I have never done this before so it was so exciting to try!

Every Chinese Doctor I have been to says that I have cold energy in my stomach. So I am always willing to try anything to get rid of this cold energy. Rather than living a healthy life of constant physical activity, restricted computer use, and all the other modern things that we do to make us unbalanced creatures - I chose to put myself through ancient practices - like STOMACH FIREBURNING or MOXA (mugwart) steaming!!!!

Now contrary to what may appear as a stunt to prove my fearlessness, I am actually undergoing the fire stomach process for the purposes of rebalancing my energy.

So the philosophy behind fireburning is that the fire’s heat will warm up your stomach - it will start moving the cold energy out and help you restore your yin energy. After 5 times of lighting a fire and putting the fire out on my stomach - I felt so wonderful. Here’s a rough explanation of the process.

step 1: set herbal cloths on stomachThe doctor first wraps my stomach in saran wrap. Then he lays down cloth soaked in medicinal herbs and alcohol.

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Then I am doused with a oil. The doctor strikes the match and lights the oil on fire. The oil is glazed on me in various patterns. The first pattern is the “heart-to-stomach” pattern, as seen in this photo to the left.

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In between each fireburning, the doctor massaged my stomach - it’s the best feeling in the world. It felt as if he was caressing every part of my large and small intestinal track and giving it lots of love and care.

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And then after the massage, the next fire is lit!

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And the best part is that in the end- when the fire burning is done correctly - he takes off the saran wrap, medicine cloth, and starts Doggy Paddling down from the top of my stomach to the very bottom of my intestines - you can HEAR A RIVER of activity going on inside! it’s totalllly FREAKY - I could hear a river gurgling - as if he was totally giving me a full plumbing system overhaul!
he said that when performed with the right type of fire shapes, the doggy paddling takes all the released coldness and moves it out.

the whole entire time I focused on using qi gong breathing techniques - because I am super sensitive to energy I could feel the cold air flowing out of the bottom of my feet.

okI lied, I was TOTALLY FREAKED OUT about being burned alive! This was my first when the fire was lit the first time.

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But here’s my face post-treatment - see I’m alive!  The rest of my fire stomach photos are here.

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While I was being lit on fire, I kept thinking that I was inadequate as a human being for even go to the Chinese doctor for this. It just reminds me of how out of touch I am with my body, the earth, and the stars.  So going to the Chinese doctor  for me is like a form of rebirth and a bit of self-punishment (for not being healthy when I am living in the states).

But then I think - is it only when I travel - when I’m farthest away from everything and everyone that I intimately know - is that the only time I feel that I can take care of myself without feeling guilty? Is it only when I am unreachable that I recover from everyday life in the states - when my family stuff is so far away that it is absolutely out of my control?

Then I start thinking that’s stupid tricia - peace is where you are - but sometimes I feel that the only way to really extract myself out of my own life is to leave the country and cross an ocean away.  I wonder if this is a pattern of modern life now - middle class people overworking and then leaving for a few months every year or few years to prevent burn out and just to re-balance. It certainly has become a pattern in my life - is the amount of traveling we do equivalent to the amount of stress we have at home?  sometimes I think so…

well anyways this is seriously the best form of self-punishment - when the doctor tells me that my yin-yang isn’t balanced - it actually makes me really excited to become more balanced again. I am always excited for them to say:

ok here your energy is blocked, so that’s why your hair is turning white or that’s why your bowel movements aren’t regular.

When they tell me how unbalanced I am, I start thinking about how I can take better care of myself.


AFter fireburning, the doctor told me of all the herbs and foods that I should eat to heal my body. for example, I need to eat more lemon peels.  This time the doctor told me that my health was pretty good, but my back and neck is messed up from years of sitting in front of a computer. Plus I haven’t been meditating or dancing as much lately :(

So I love this herbal/ancient practice - only in china…only in china. In India I tried going to the medicinal doctor - I actually went to 3 of them because I really wanted to give it a chance - well each on told me that I was too much of a “pita” and they threw my naked body on a slap of hard wood and started dumping herbal oil on me and then the woman rubbed the oil on me forcing my bones into the wood table and I slid around like a dead fish - I tried to grab onto the wood but it was impossible! - may  sound wonderful-(hmm hands + oil) BUT NOT!!!!!!  it was painful and the worst part was that  I didn’t feel more balanced afterwards.  SO I’ve decided China is the place for me to go for medicinal care.

oh and here’s another fire-like treatment called Moxa - I did this the week before. It’s much less scarier than fire stomach treatment.

Trying to get Yang Jie to smile.

Trying to get Yang Jie to Smile!  it's not easy to get Chinese people to smile in photos

Yang Jie is from Guizhou - from a small ethnic minority group - she had to leave her home to make $ so she came to Beijing. I met Yang Jie while I was walking around in Wudaokou. We’ve been talking over the past few days and slowly we’ve become friends as I stop by each day to talk to her.

She sells textiles from her home village - where the women hand-weave beautiful cloth items. Here is a pic of some of the stuff that I have bought from Yang Jie.

Today I saw the local security guard trying to tell Yang Jie to leave the grounds - he said it was illegal for her to be selling in the parking lot. I watched him push one of the other girls down on the ground. As I watched this unfold, she said to the security guard

“you must have compassion for us migrants - for us ethnic minorities - we have no way to make money back home - just let us sell our stuff - we all have to eat - you have to eat - please just understand our plight.”

When I bought my stuff from her I told her that she was brave - she said that she wasn’t doing anything wrong - that she is also trying to make a living like the rest of us. When we talked more she told me about all the changes that were happening in the rural areas - the positive changes - like health care and improved schooling. But not all of these changes had reached her village yet so she has come to Beijing to make money. When i asked her how she deals with these local cops that just harass people like her - she essentially was saying that they are not reflective of the central’s government’s policies.

I am amazed by people like Yang Jie - who are very aware of the government’s process of improving the countryside. She knows how to place these bottom-tired local cops, like the one she dealt with today - and she can articulate that these local cops do not reflect upon the policies of the central government.

With all the migrants that I have spoken to - none have complained about the government’s policies in rural areas. All of them have been very happy with the recent changes. They will quickly list all of the changes that still need to be made - but they always say - we need more time - China is BIG. In many ways - they are more understanding than urban people of how government policies are implemented.

Yang Jie also has a son who is 3 years old now. She already has 20 years old daugher, and at 40 years old she gave birth to her son. When I took the photo he was going poop on the sidewalk so I didn’t want to disturb his process. I was amazed that the 3 year old child could just squat in the middle of the busiest sidewalk in Wudaokou and just go poop without any problems! People were walking past him and some almost stepped on him! He did it right in the middle of the sidewalk - he didn’t even step-off ot the side! Kids in America take forever to learn how to poop on their own - we take care of their pooping process with books and special toilet seats and raised steppers.

Children of street working migrant families in China cannot afford diapers or any of those excrement aiding materials. They just use the streets.

After I took the photo, the father scooped up in poop and put it in the garbage can. No one stepped on it.

fabrics from Yangjie ' made in Guizhou by the Miou ethnic group

visited a school for children of migrant workers in Wuhan, China

i wrote about why I visited the school here on my academic blog, cultural bytes - Setting Up Fieldwork Site

I visited a school for children of migrant families in Wuhan, China. This school is government certified and currently has 800 students from 1st to 9th grade. Fees are 300RMB ($50) every semester (two semesters each quarter). The students are children of migrants. These students pay to go to school because their parents have taken them with them out of their village where school would’ve been free to the city where they are working without an official identity registration (hukou card). Without the hukou card, their children cannot gain access to any of the social services provided to residents of a city. Therefore several hundreds of these schools have been started independently by migrants throughout these migrant-receiving cities in China. These schools must charge a fee so that they can hire trained teachers, buy books, rent a classroom and perform administrative duties.

Here are some pictures below from my visit yesterday. I went during nap time so many of the students are sleeping in the photos. but once they woke up they couldn’t stop jumping! well maybe I couldn’t stop jumping :)
migrant children's school, government certified: teacher

migrant children's school, government certified: awake from nap

migrant school, government certified: nap time for the 1st graders

migrant children's school, government certified: class napping, kid on time-out

migrant worker's children school, government certified

migrant worker's children school, government certified - fingers high!

migrant workers children school, government certified

migrant workers children school, government certified - i'm one of the children now

chinese migrants, urban development, world economy

(writing from internet cafe, must write quick - lots of cig smoke)

I’m in Wuhan, China. Wuhan is the capital of Hubei Province. It is not an internationally known city like Shanghai or Beijing or even Shengzhen - but it is a city on the rise - a mega-city in the making.

If you were to go to a port city in China - you would hear lots of stories about how exports have totally fallen - shipment containers are empty - the whole world economy has slowed down. But if you come to the middle of China - you would hear a slightly different story. Industries are now moving inland, away from port cities. Inland cities in Wuhan are part of China’s transition away from being a primarily export country. There is a strong sense here the Chinese people are producing for the Chinese.

Wuhan is crass - Wuhan is noisy - Wuhan is changing - VERY quickly.

right now the entire city is under construction. A new subway system will be running by the end of 2009. China’s subway construction teams are world famous for their expertise in building entire subway systems in 2 weeks :) In Wuhan - the sidewalks are ripped up with food vendors selling boiled eggs and stinky tofu with twirling pink ribbons to keep the flies away (stinky tofu is the official name of the tofu because the smell is unbearable). Workers old and young, from government firms to rural village are working away 24 hours a day remaking the city.

Wuhan i’m in love with you!

yummmmmmmmmmmmy food!

wuhan, under construction, new subway soon

signs of migrants everywhere...good sign...china's economy supporting  the world right now

signs of migrants everywhere...good sign...china's economy supporting  the world right now

trains - hard beds and soft beds...living on overnight trains in china

for the past 2 nights i’ve been sleeping on trains. I’m exhausted. and in two more days I’m taking another train for 2 nights in a row.

The first night was a hard-bed train ride from Beijing to Shanghai. This hard bed rise has 3 levels of bunk beds with 6 beds in each cubicle. The Hard bed tickets cost 300RMB and the beds are definitely hard and the toilet is the kind that you have to squat to use. I\

good thins is that I love hard beds - so that was no big deal. It’s just more crowded in the Hard Bed Trains - but I didn’t have too many crying babies so not too bad. But as you can see in the picture above - it was super croweded. The attendants selling food would just roll over my foot at times - I guess I would do that too if I had to roll a cart in a 2 inch wide aisle!

The top bunk is so high that you can’t even sit straight up - this is where I slept - the very very top! it was a very cramped 12 hour train ride to Shanghai. I was only awake for 2 hours - so it wasn’t that bad. I am scared of heights but had to get over that! the train was full so this was my only option. Good thing is that I love sleeping on trains- the minute I lay down i usually
pass out.

In this picture above - I’m on a luxury train ride from shanghai to wuhan! a no squat toilet + minor bug/bed bites = happy tricia on luxury train ride from Shanghai to Wuhan!

This is super luxury, 400RMB - and best of all jinge and I had the whole bed compartment to ourselves!
I only take the luxury train ride if I am with a male friend - otherwise i ride the hard bed with the 6 bunk beds in a open cubicle. This luxury ride with 4 beds is a closed cubicle - so if I were by myself and 3 males that would be NO BUENO for me.

could I just live on the trains in china! why can’t the US have a wonderful train system?

Made it Through Beijing's Flu Checks! Yahh no Quarantines!

WOOHOO I made it past the Beijing Intl Airport H1N1 Flu health checks!
These new checks involved 3 extra steps before you go through customs.
The first was when the health officials entered the plane with forehead temperature zappers. As seen in the picture, they held the zapper 1cm from forehead to test for temperature. When every single person was cleared of a temperature on the plane, we were allowed to exit the plane to Step 2.

Step 2 is when we handed over our health cards stating our self-reported health conditions, itinerary for the next 7 days, emergency contacts and all lodging addresses. After this card was stamped, we were alllowed to go through the 3rd step - which was a temperature check. After these 3 - then we stood in line at customs.

Now these extra 3 health checks may sound really intense, but it was not a long process. It was rather quiet efficient. China is not always known for being efficient, but i belief this could be reflective of a new China. . I can’t even imagine the levels of bureaucracy that would happen if all US airports had to health checks on all international flights ( which the US SHOULD be doing on all departing intl flights with the H1N1 flu being more of a problem in the US than any other country). My entire deplaning time from landing to luggage retrieval took 53 minutes - which is how much time it usually takes without the additional Health and Quarantine check system.
All the lines were short - no more than 7 people in front of me for the longest line. And the most pleasant part - all the health officials were really lovely! Some were even smiling! It felt more pleasant entering into China than crossing into the US from Mexico - sometimes the US immigration officials are rude. So keep up with the lovely presentation China - it’a a great image to keep up!

I am just so happy that not a single person was sick on my plane- because if one person EVEN tested for a high temperature, than we all would’ve been quarantined.


I don’t think I could’ve ever been more excited to see this happy sign RELAX - gonna get your luggage!


Interrogating the "Developing" vs "Developed" Country dichotomy: Assumptions, technologies, and Americanism - VOTE FOR OPTION B!

culturalbytes:



When speaking with others about my work, I do not use the word “developing” as a label for the countries I work in - China and Mexico (or India, where I was last year).
But it’s difficult when everyone else insists on calling all places outside of the US and Europe “developing” (or even under-developed).

Who has the power to define when a country is “developing” or developed”? What do we mean by development?

Is a country labeled “developing” if it is considered to be at poverty level according to the UN Human Poverty Index or World Bank poverty index? Just because a country has poor people does not mean the people are in poverty or an impoverished group. (I will write a separate post about this statement later)

Labeling a country developing or developed is a dichotomy that places the West (Europe, US, sometimes Japan, Canda and Australia) to be the First World—models for all aspiring nation-states. And then everywhere else outside of the “developed world” are black holes of underdevelopment or regions in the process of developing into a “First World” nation. This dichotomy assumes a linear trajectory with all “non-developed” or “developing” nations aiming to become more “developed.”
The word is a politically correct post-colonial stand-in for concepts around civilizing the “other,” the “savages”, the “indians.”

  • So what are developing countries developing into? Is a country considered developed when it starts acting like other “First World” nations? Starts moving all its citizens into wage-labor? Pushes for people to buy on credit? Pushing countries to participate in global capitalism?
  • Is a “developed” country one that looks like the United States? When it start exploiting neighboring countries or engages them in neo-liberal agreements that clearly provide more benefit to the “developed” nation and in the long run actually harms the ‘developing” nation?

So I work in Mexico - let’s use this as an example.

  • Would Mexico, an OECD and NAFTA, partner become more “developed” if it transitioned from being an export economy to an import economy?
  • Would it be more “developed” if it learned how to out-source it’s economic activities to its neighbors?
  • Would Mexico be developed if it learned how to jail 40% of a historically discriminated group? (US has the highest incarceration rate in the world! 2 million in prison, 4.9 million under supervision, 40% of black males at any given time in the US are in jail).
  • Would Mexico be developed if they legalized the sale of hand guns?
  • Would Mexico be developed if they started unstabilizing neighboring economies, and then proceed to on one hand offer lots of low-wage labor jobs that other Mexicans won’t perform and then on the other hand tell neighboring countries that it is illegal to enter Mexico to take these jobs?
  • Would Mexico be developed if it copied the US’s Patriot Act and spied on a group of citizens without due process?

I ask these questions to point out the shaky definition of “developed.” In comparing the US and Mexico, the US in many ways is more progressive than Mexico, but in many other ways Mexico is way more progressive and forward thinking than the US. So we should question what we mean by “developed” and ask if that has affected our ideas about American exceptionalism.

Can we find an alternative from “developing”? Certainly a general label with sweeping assumptions of Western superiority does not work.

Here are some alternatives that I have seen being used elsewhere. I am not a fan of them.

Marginalized
I don’t like the world marginalized because many of times Western nations have created the very situation of marginalization in many of these countries. We complain X country is marginalized, but we don’t take responsibility for how our policies may have marginalized them in the first place! When I hear this term being applied to Africa I think of two old ladies chatting and saying, ” oh dear - those Africans are so marginalized from us, let’s donate money to the Help Rwanda with Water Fund for Every HIV Maleria Baby.”
Also there is too much power for the signifier to deem the other as marginalized - which is practically the same as using the word “alienated.” How does it sound if I were to say, “India is an alienated country?” Alienated from what and by who? No. So out with “marginalized.”

Emerging
So what are these countries emerging from? Who are they emerging to? It sounds like we—the West—JUST noticed and discovered these “emerging” regions. It’s as if these countries were laying dormant and all of sudden they are growing! building! working! emerging! It also has too much of a capitalistic overtone that treats people like consumers - the “emerging markets” theme. When I hear emerging, I imagine a circle, where the US is in the middle and it sees the whole world beyond its circle and then choses to deem areas that are “emerging.” Then it sets off on a ship and says I will talk to these people in these “emerging areas.” (and then I will take their things! ahhh) Well hey - that’s what the Europeans did back then but they had God on their side. Now we have things - lots of things - instead of taking resources we “help” them turn their resources into commodities to “help” these “emerging” regions come out of poverty. AHHH so no to emerging!

First World, Second World?
by now this should sound obviously wrong! hello POWER problems? who has the power to define who is in First place - sounds like rigged game to me. so definitely a NO!

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OPTION B! So here are a few words that I am using as an alternative for now (as suggested by the picture in this post).

transitioning or transforming
These two words connote change and dynamism! like yah things are moving! These words paint a more circular, holistic and cyclical image than the linear, 1-D images I think of when I hear marginalized or emerging.
Transitioning is already used quite often to refer to the Chinese economy - a quasi socialist-capitalist market, hence a transitioning economy.
Transforming and transitioning are both words that could leave the power in the hands of the people and the outsider. So a region can be transforming to us (the outsider), but also transforming to the villagers in everyday life. For example, a village could be transitioning from one type of economic model to another, and it could just as well at the same time be under economic, social or cultural transition to the villagers themselves.

I also like these terms because it takes a more relative approach to regions - so that a so called “developed” area could contain several regions that are undergoing a lot of transformation. Or a “developed” country could be relatively stable and not experiencing a lot of transitions. It allows us to look at countries like China with more precise terms - where one province could be experiencing a lot of economic transitioning while another is experiencing more social transitioning. Or in Mexico we could say some states are undergoing a lot of political transformation while other states are less politically active.

Under-served
I also use the term under-served in the context that WE - I - AMERICA - have literally under-served a group. Therefore, when I work in the projects of the South Bronx I call it an under-served area because it has been under-served by the city, the state of NYC and etc. I refer to the rural areas of Oaxaca where I work as under-served because in some areas, such as education, have been under-served by the state government, the federal government, corporations and etc.

I would love to find out if you have any ideas of other words!

___________________________________________

So what is at stake in defining a region as developing or as something else?
Why it is such a big deal to me? What’s at stake for me are my analyses, my ideas, and my research conclusions. The way a researcher sees, frames or defines a country or region, affects the analysis that comes out of the investigation. For this reason, it is critical for researchers who work with global issues to be self-reflective of how they label a country.

If you think a group of people LACK something, then your research will only see what they lack and not what they have. And this could color the researcher’s proposals for policy or program proposals for a region. What I’m trying to argue is that the term “developing” implies the notion that a group is lacking information, knowledge, resources and etc. It implies that developing areas need to be fixed. I refuse to use the term “developing” on any of my groups because I just don’t see them in that way!

The label of “developing” contains a whole lot of assumptions about modernity, capitalism and power. When a researcher goes into a region to study power relations and then proceeds to label the region as developing, then the analysis runs the danger of reifying the very power imbalance that is being studied in the first place. And this happens quite often and new academic fields are born out of “development” minded research and new projects are born out of “development” frameworks.

For example, out of many development minded research has emerged “development-based” projects that aim to economically “develop” a country. A field that seems close to the work I do is Information Communication Technology for Development (ICT4D). I have an inherent discomfort with the entire field of ICT4D. As a young field, it is still developing its theories and models. But at the end of the day, there is an assumption that technology does good - technology is for “development.” (will write more posts later on this faulty assumption)

Well anyone in or going into ICT4D should read William Easterly’s The White Man’s Burden: Why the West’s Efforts to Aid the Rest Have Done So Much Ill and So Little Good (thanks David Jacobs for bringing this to my attention!). Easterly carefully documents how World Bank or UN projects over time have actually worked to under-develop a region. My counter to the ICT4D world is that it needs to have a sister field if they want to legitimize their normative field - called ICT4UD - which stands for Information Communication Technology for Under-Development. This field would look at all the ways technology has under-developed a region. And this field would avoid showing repetitive pictures of 30 impoverished Pakistani or South African kids around one laptop. please - no more.

Vote for OPTION B!

Suggested Readings:

Easterly W. The White Man’s Burden: Why the West’s Efforts to Aid the Rest Have Done So Much Ill and So Little Good. Penguin Press; 2006:436.

Redclift MR. Sustainable development (1987-2005) – an oxymoron comes of age. Sustainable Development. 2005:65-84.

I received a National Science Foundation (NSF) Grant!

culturalbytes:

Picture 73

I am so excited to find out that I have received a National Science Foundation (NSF) grant! I will be going this summer to work with in China with the China Internet Network Information Center 中国互联网络信息中心 (CNNIC), the government agency that manages all of China’s internet affairs (equivalent to the FCC in the US). I met with CNNIC last summer in Beijing. We agreed upon a summer project in which I would analyze how youths and migrants are using ICTs to manage their inter-personal communication networks, with a special interest in online gaming networks.

It’s pretty exciting that these next 3 months at CNNIC will be the start of my dissertation fieldwork. I will be in Beijing for two months this summer! Here’s the title and description of my project below. If you or anyone you know is working on anything related to China and the internet - I would love to talk to you or them! And let’s talk if you are you going to be in Beijing this summer!

Title: China’s Internet Policy and Digital Network Architecture: Information Communication Technology (ICT) Practices among Youths and Migrant

Project Summary: This project asks how China’s internet policies and digital architectures influence the communication practices of two important and growing populations of new users—youths and migrants. I investigate how the inter-personal communication patterns of youths and migrants are affected by two factors: (1) recent internet usage policies set by the Chinese administration and (2) cellphone and internet digital architecture—an infrastructural comparison that is a central feature of this study.

The availability of popular ICTs to all citizens in countries such as China, renders problematic any theoretically dichotomous notions of the “Digital Divide” that are based on ICT “haves and have-nots”—where the “haves” have more technology and are consequently more empowered than the “have-nots.” A central contribution of this study is that it has the potential to transform current concepts of technology access and of ICT usage by accounting for important and specific technological differences in digital architectures and communication policies in the practices of new ICT users in China.

Thank you to Christena Turner, Richard Madsen, Eric Cech, Shannon Spanhake, Kenyatta Cheese, leah muse-orlinoff, stephanie little, Bill Blanpied and Bill Chang for all your help!

Just returned from NSF meeting in DC with Bill-squared

culturalbytes:

In preparation for my summer research project, “China’s Internet Policy and Digital Network Architecture: Information Communication Technology (ICT) Practices among Youths and Migrant” at China Internet Network Information Center 中国互联网络信息中心 (CNNIC), I went to DC for an NSF-sponsored meeting for the EAPSI program through the Office of International Science and Engineering (OISE).

I was finally able to meet up with two Bill’s who made this oppotunity possible, Bill Blanpied on the left and Bill Chang on the right. I am grateful for their introductions to Dr. Mao Wei, who I will be working with this summer at CNNIC along with his amazing office of reseachers, including Wan En Hai! This is so exciting to work with Dr .Mao Wei - the person who started CNNIC and established many of the early efforts in China that has allowed it to grow so quickly and efficiently.

I met Bill Blanpied in India during the summer of 2008 for the China-India-US Workshop on Science, Technology and Innovation Policy in Bangalore, India. After the informative conference I was heading off to China for fieldwork from India, so Bill suggested that I meet up with Bill Chang, the Director of NSF’s Beijing office at that time.

I am so grateful for the guidance from Bill-Squared - thank you for all your encouragement on my project!