Emerald Login
   

Welcome guest



Article Request:
Native American technology access: the Gates Foundation in Four Corners


Article Information:

Title:

Native American technology access: the Gates Foundation in Four Corners

Author(s):

Andrew C. Gordon, Margaret Gordon, Jessica Dorr

Journal:

The Electronic Library

Year:

2003

Volume:

21

Issue:

5

Page:

428 - 434


ISSN:

0264-0473


DOI:

10.1108/02640470310499795

Publisher:

MCB UP Ltd

Document Access:

Existing customers:

Please login above.

You do not have rights to view the article

Purchase this document:
Price payable: GBP £13.00
plus handling charge of GBP £1.50 and VAT where applicable.
Purchase

Request this document:
Print or e-mail a document request to your librarian.
Request

Reprints & permissions:
Image: Rightslink Request

Abstract:

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s Native American Access to Technology Program (NAATP) was designed to provide computer and Internet access to Native peoples in the Four Corners area of the USA. Through this multi-year effort, complex packages of hardware, software, installation and training have been made available to 43 tribes in 161 settings. An intensive, collaborative process resulted in a package carefully designed to fit tribal interests, circumstances and political arrangements, including multimedia (graphics-intensive) equipment, language preservation software, and satellite connections to the Internet as necessary. This interim assessment concludes that the program has substantially increased tribal access to computing and information and has often fostered creative use of the technologies. Deeply embedded economic and political realities and their legacies remain, however, with substantial immediate and long-term consequences.

Keywords:

Computers, Economics, Information retrieval, Internet, Libraries, Native Americans


Article Type:

Case study


Article URL:

http://zerlina.emeraldinsight.com/10.1108/02640470310499795

Top