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Digital Revolution for The Vulnerable: Untold Story of Bangladesh's Social Safety Net Transformation
Coles
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Digital Revolution for The Vulnerable: Untold Story of Bangladesh's Social Safety Net Transformation in Ottawa, ON
By None
Current price: $65.95


By None
Digital Revolution for The Vulnerable: Untold Story of Bangladesh's Social Safety Net Transformation in Ottawa, ON
Current price: $65.95
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
Digital Revolution for the Vulnerable tells a grounded, sometimes uncomfortable, and ultimately hopeful story about Bangladesh&s push to shift social protection from paper registers to mobile screens-from cash to code. Instead of getting lost in jargon and big promises, the book stays close to real lives: people receiving old age allowances, widows and destitute women relying on small but vital stipends, and the local officials trying to make a new system work. It traces how mobile money and government-to-person (G2P) payments can reduce leakage, sideline middlemen, and speed up transfers, while still leaving many behind because of gender norms, where they live, what they can read, and who holds power. Drawing on detailed fieldwork and clear-eyed policy thinking, the authors show what actually works on the ground, what falls apart in practice, and what needs to change so that digital cash transfers respect people&s dignity and strengthen their voice, rather than simply making the system more efficient.
Digital Revolution for the Vulnerable tells a grounded, sometimes uncomfortable, and ultimately hopeful story about Bangladesh&s push to shift social protection from paper registers to mobile screens-from cash to code. Instead of getting lost in jargon and big promises, the book stays close to real lives: people receiving old age allowances, widows and destitute women relying on small but vital stipends, and the local officials trying to make a new system work. It traces how mobile money and government-to-person (G2P) payments can reduce leakage, sideline middlemen, and speed up transfers, while still leaving many behind because of gender norms, where they live, what they can read, and who holds power. Drawing on detailed fieldwork and clear-eyed policy thinking, the authors show what actually works on the ground, what falls apart in practice, and what needs to change so that digital cash transfers respect people&s dignity and strengthen their voice, rather than simply making the system more efficient.


















