Stockholms universitet

Caroline Wamala LarssonFöreståndare Spider

Om mig

Jag är docent i genusvetenskap med intresse och fokus på den dynamiska skärningspunkten mellan forskning och praktik. För närvarande är jag föreståndare för SPIDER, ett centrum som främjar inkluderande digitalisering, lokaliserad på institutionen för data- och systemvetenskap vid Stockholms universitet. I över tjugo år har jag varit obeveklig i min strävan att kunna utnyttja teknologi till att skapa social transformation. Min akademiska positionering, samarbetsanda och engagemang för inkludering inordnar mig avsiktligt i kopplingen mellan akademi, teknik och samhälleliga förändring. 

Jag advocerar för STEM-rörelsen och förespråkar dess tillämpning i samhällsomvandlingen. Jag föreställer mig teknik som en kraftfull utjämnare, som på ett rättvist sätt kan väva samman olika samhällen. Jag är medutredare i GeJuSTA-projektet finansierat av IDRC, och leder work package för tre pågående EU-finansierade projekt på SPIDER, nämligen; EQUALS-EUHoliCare och iPRIS. Jag har utöver dessa projekt även bidragit genom det svenska bilaterala forskningssamarbetet finansierat av Sida och lett de digitala transformationsresorna för utvalda institutioner för högre utbildning i utveckling länder.

Forskningsprojekt

Publikationer

I urval från Stockholms universitets publikationsdatabas

  • COVID-19: From health crises to food security anxiety and policy implications

    2021. Linley Chiwona-Karltun (et al.). Ambio 50 (4), 794-811

    Artikel

    Like the rest of the world, African countries are reeling from the health, economic and social effects of COVID-19. The continent's governments have responded by imposing rigorous lockdowns to limit the spread of the virus. The various lockdown measures are undermining food security, because stay at home orders have among others, threatened food production for a continent that relies heavily on agriculture as the bedrock of the economy. This article draws on quantitative data collected by the GeoPoll, and, from these data, assesses the effect of concern about the local spread and economic impact of COVID-19 on food worries. Qualitative data comprising 12 countries south of the Sahara reveal that lockdowns have created anxiety over food security as a health, economic and human rights/well-being issue. By applying a probit model, we find that concern about the local spread of COVID-19 and economic impact of the virus increases the probability of food worries. Governments have responded with various efforts to support the neediest. By evaluating the various policies rolled out we advocate for a feminist economics approach that necessitates greater use of data analytics to predict the likely impacts of intended regulatory relief responses during the recovery process and post-COVID-19.

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  • Mobile phones in the transformation of the informal economy: stories from market women in Kampala, Uganda

    2018. Caroline Wamala Larsson, Jakob Svensson. Journal of Eastern African Studies 12 (3), 533-551

    Artikel

    This research project is situated within the area mobile technologies for development (M4D), i.e. that mobile communication technologies play a vital role in the livelihood of people in developing regions. Out of a larger explorative study of how market women in Kampala use their mobile phone(s), this article focuses on the transformation of the so-called informal economy, here in the form of Kampala street markets. Departing from stories of the women themselves, the article discusses the role of mobile telephony in this transformation. The street markets today have become hybridized as mobile money allows for non-street transactions. The appropriation of the mobile phone into these micro enterprises, we argue, has the potential to produce new regulatory spaces, considering that mobile services, located in the formal sector, are deeply embedded in Kampala's informal economic practices. To make sense of these results, we turn to science, technology and society studies (STS). STS helps us understand the mutual co-production of mobile phone practices and the transformation of the street markets. The mobile phone represents a force for change in the market women's economic activities, at once challenging and reinforcing the informality of the Kampala markets.

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