Birch, Kean D.Hassan, Yousif Abdulla Obaid2023-03-282023-03-282022-12-152023-03-28http://hdl.handle.net/10315/41017Imaginaries of artificial intelligence (AI) have transcended geographies of the Global North and become increasingly entangled with narratives of economic growth, progress, and modernity in Africa. This raises several issues such as the entanglement of AI with global technoscientific capitalism and its impact on the dissemination of AI in Africa. The lack of African perspectives on the development of AI exacerbates concerns of raciality and inclusion in the scientific research, circulation, and adoption of AI. My argument in this dissertation is that innovation in AI, in both its sociotechnical imaginaries and political economies, excludes marginalized countries, nations and communities in ways that not only bar their participation in the reception of AI, but also as being part and parcel of its creation. Underpinned by decolonial thinking, and perspectives from science and technology studies and African studies, this dissertation looks at how AI is reconfiguring the debate about development and modernization in Africa and the implications for local sociotechnical practices of AI innovation and governance. I examined AI in international development and industry across Kenya, Ghana, and Nigeria, by tracing Canada’s AI4D Africa program and following AI start-ups at AfriLabs. I used multi-sited case studies and discourse analysis to examine the data collected from interviews, participant observations, and documents. In the empirical chapters, I first examine how local actors understand the notion of decolonizing AI and show that it has become a sociotechnical imaginary. I then investigate the political economy of AI in Africa and argue that despite Western efforts to integrate the African AI ecosystem globally, the AI epistemic communities in the continent continue to be excluded from dominant AI innovation spaces. Finally, I examine the emergence of a Pan-African AI imaginary and argue that AI governance can be understood as a state-building experiment in post-colonial Africa. The main issue at stake is that the lack of African perspectives in AI leads to negative impacts on innovation and limits the fair distribution of the benefits of AI across nations, countries, and communities, while at the same time excludes globally marginalized epistemic communities from the imagination and creation of AI.Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.Information scienceAfrican studiesPolitical scienceThe Globalization of Artificial Intelligence: African Imaginaries of Technoscientific FuturesElectronic Thesis or Dissertation2023-03-28Science and technology studiesDecolonizationPostcolonialismAnticolonialism African studiesBlack studiesPolitical economyPolitical economy of technoscienceInnovation studiesInformation scienceCommunication studiesArtificial IntelligenceAIComputingDataBig dataAI governanceAI ethicsResponsible AIResponsible innovationAI for goodAI for developmentAI for social goodAI policyInnovation policyTechnoscience policyFourth industrial revolutionPostcolonial STSDecolonial STSAnticolonial STSTechnology policyData protectionData policyData colonialitySurveillance capitalismDigital capitalismTechnoscientific capitalismCapitalismSocialismAfrican socialismPan-AfricanismAfrican UnionOECDOrganization of African UnityIDRCGlobal AffairsCanadaKenyaGhanaNigeriaAfricaAI4DICT4D