In the past week, I
attended three unrelated conferences. If they had been mashed together, a
ground breaking innovation would have emerged.
The first meeting on Monday morning was a launch of school data by Map Kibera, an initiative to map Kibra (formerly known as Kibera) and make it easier for residents to locate social services.
On
Wednesday morning, I chaired a session at a regional conference of
postal organisations trying to find ways to cope with technology and
save themselves from extinction. One of their needs is an addressing
system to start home delivery of parcels in the growing e-commerce
industry.
On
Thursday afternoon I was giving a keynote speech to creative artists
trying to find their role in the emerging digital space. Had we
combined these conferences, the outcome would have been a better
solution to the problems facing our country.
It emerged that all the three conferences needed a great deal of data if they were to succeed.
In
Kibra, data was essential in engaging policy makers with hard facts.
For example, data from the mapping shows that primary operators for
Kibra schools include: NGOs or CBOs at 37 per cent, private owners at 29
per cent, religious organisations at 27 per cent and Government at 4
per cent.
So
when the policy statement of the education ministry on Form One
admissions is biased towards government schools, they should understand
who they hurt most.
Postal
corporations need data on trade and movement of goods for better
logistical planning. They also need ways of reaching customers wherever
they are.
Finally,
creative artists need data on media and entertainment consumption
patterns as a basis for developing new business models and meeting
customer demands.
Whilst
Map Kibera has the perfect solution for Posta to reach people they have
never reached before, Posta is hedging its bet on a policy process to
allow them reach the unreachable.
TOILET-TO-PEOPLE RATIO
Let
me confess that I started the process of street numbering with the hope
of using Global Positioning System (GPS) in informal settlements.
However, bureaucracy took many turns and by the time I was leaving, we
had only covered the Central Business District (CBD).
My
thinking was to create addresses for the entire country first, then
create a law. However, that has changed. The law will be created first,
before we create the addressing system. Innovation in my view precedes
legislation.
Meanwhile,
residents of Kibra and other marginalised areas are being taken
advantage of by unscrupulous people. “They are stealing from the poor,”
area MP, Kenneth Okoth, says.
The MP was particularly livid with Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn’s latest book, A Path Appears: Transforming Lives, Creating Opportunity, in which he says numbers had been exaggerated to portray Kibra negatively.
The MP wondered what logic Kristof, a New York Times columnist, two-time Pulitzer Prize winner and co-author, used in stating that Kibra had a toilet-to-people ratio of 1:1,300.
The
MP rightfully said that if that were to be true, given that the entire
day has 1,440 minutes, then every morning you would see queues of people
waiting for their turn in the toilet, that they must use it very
quickly indeed to enable others use it.
Curiosity
forced me to buy the book. It reads like a global green party
manifesto, profiling social-justice individuals and groups, and
describing concerns that range from environmental issues such as clean
energy and reduction of deforestation to social issues such as battling
fetal alcohol syndrome, sex trafficking, malaria, clubfoot, cleft
palate, sexual assault against children and women, AIDS, lack of potable
water, illiteracy, child malnutrition and poverty.
OPEN DATA, OPEN SOURCE, OPEN ACCESS
In
Kibra, they profile my friends, Kenneth Odede and Jessica Posner. Like
many people before the census data came out to confirm the Kibra
population, Kristof was largely relying on guess work that later could
be mistaken for exaggeration.
Anyone
reading the book could perhaps criticise Kristof and WuDunn for
neglecting to mention some of the prominent NGOs working to mitigate
these maladies. They also fail to bring out the impact of climate
change.
However,
Mr Okoth and the co-authors Kristof and WuDunn agree that some of the
resources meant for the poor get stolen. Indeed, if every shilling
raised to alleviate poverty in Kibra were to be used for its intended
purpose, every one of the close to 400,000 residents will be on a
comfortable monthly salary for at least five years.
Accordinf
to the Bible, God prohibited such theft in Proverbs 22:22-23 (KJV): Rob
not the poor, because he is poor: Neither oppress the afflicted in the
gate. For the Lord will plead their cause and spoil the soul of those
that spoiled them.
But before God makes the sinners repay, we can prevent this through building open data platforms like Map Kibera.
Before
I tell you more about what Map Kibera is and how it converges with
Posta and the creative economy industry, let me first explain the
concept of open data because it cuts across the interests of these three
groups.
Open
data is the idea that certain data should be freely available to
everyone to use without any mechanisms of control. For example,
information on who is providing social services to the poor, who funds
such activities and how much is funded, should be in the public domain.
The
goals of the open data movement are similar to those of other 'open'
movements such as open source and open access. It is critically
important for stakeholders to know how much of the money raised for
Kibra comes to Kibra.
Residents
can also ask the right questions, for example, how much Constituency
Development Fund (CDF) their MP received, and where it was spent.
PARCELS TO 'UNREACHABLE PLACES'
Map
Kibera was officially launched at Eastlands Hotel on Tuesday last
week. The low-key event was witnessed by the area MP, Ken Okoth, the
Nairobi County Education Minister, Christopher Khaemba, Erica Hagen of
Groundtruth, and many other dignitaries from Kibra.
The
project originated with a winning entry to the Gates Foundation Grand
Challenge pilot contest on data interoperability, early last year. Map
Kibera was a key entrant with partners that included GroundTruth
Initiative and Development Gateway.
Ms
Hagen co-founded Map Kibera Trust in 2009 with her partner and a team
of youth in Kibera, several of whom are still part of the Trust and
worked on this project. GroundTruth Initiative was founded in 2010, also by Ms Hagen and partner Mikel Maron.
Hagen
and Maron live in Washington, D.C. and work through GroundTruth (a
small consulting firm) to spread more globally the kinds of projects
that Map Kibera has become known for, such as citizen-led mapping, data,
journalism, etc. They also remain quite involved with Map Kibera
itself.
We
can now locate assets in Kibra through the generosity of the Gates
Foundation and two dedicated Americans. It is incumbent upon us to make
the project sustainable.
A
private-public partnership with Posta could leverage this project to
develop new businesses, while at the same time meeting postal objectives
of universal service connectivity coverage.
Many
of the youth in Kibra can become delivery agents using GPS to take mail
and parcels to unreachable places. In similar fashion, the creative
society could reach the poor and begin to tell their story through film
and bring their plight to the sitting rooms of the rich as well as
policy makers. It is an opportunity for the creative to locate the raw
talent that lies in Kibra.
Many
people like Kristof and WuDunn mean well when they highlight the
problems of the poor and vulnerable. We must understand the dynamics of
bad reporting on our status.
HIDING OUR FUTURE
'We
are partly to blame when we hide data from the public. There is
nothing wrong in telling the world the number of the poor in our midst.
Data
is the lifeblood of innovation. We curtail our own creativity and
progress when we hide data. Data helps us shape policy to respond to
human needs.
It
is such an irreplaceable resource that in hiding it, we would be hiding
our future from the pricking eyes of those coming after us.
I
submit that Kibra is a problem that presents us with the opportunity to
innovate and be part of a global solution in poverty reduction. In
bringing together different players such as the ongoing National Youth
Project on cleaning up Kibra and not just Posta and the creative sector,
we shall be getting closer to a better solution to poverty reduction.
Henry Ford once said, “Coming together is a beginning; keeping together is progress; working together is success.”
The writer is an Associate Professor at University of Nairobi’s Business School. Twitter : @bantigito
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