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dc.contributor.authorNdubuisi-Obi, Innocent
dc.contributor.authorChen, Nuole
dc.contributor.authorTsai, Lily
dc.date.accessioned2025-12-03T17:38:00Z
dc.date.available2025-12-03T17:38:00Z
dc.date.issued2025-10-16
dc.identifier.issn2573-0142
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/164180
dc.description.abstractToday, the District Health Information System 2 (DHIS2) has become the de-facto standard for open-source health management information systems and Sierra Leone's status as the first country in sub-Saharan Africa to implement DHSI2 makes it a productive place for researchers interested in understanding the end-to-end process of infrastructuring in a low-resource bureaucratic setting. In this article, we examine its design, implementation, and maintenance in Sierra Leone over a period of 14 years - from 2008 to 2022. We present an intensive case study discretized by three morphogenetic cycles (decentralization, centralization, and fragmentation) and furnished with explanatory account's of DHIS2's evolution using a critical realist research methodology to describe the emergence of DHIS2 as digital public health infrastructure. These accounts highlight the structural and cultural systems of DHIS2, their elaborations, and their interaction with agents over successive periods of DHIS2's evolution. Our study finds that, despite its continued use in Sierra Leone, the increasing generativity in the structural and cultural systems of DHSI2 and Sierra Leone’s public health system engenders a persistent instability that requires continuous resolution. Though we find that extant literature aids in our understanding of DHIS2’s evolution, we proffer two mechanisms, infrastructural capture and socio-technical debt, which aid our explanation of events observed in our case study. Our work makes a case for more ontologically-diverse theorizing of bureaucracy-aware computing systems.en_US
dc.publisherACMen_US
dc.relation.isversionofhttps://doi.org/10.1145/3757400en_US
dc.rightsCreative Commons Attributionen_US
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/en_US
dc.sourceAssociation for Computing Machineryen_US
dc.titleBecoming Infrastructure: A Critical Realist Account of the Evolution of DHIS2 as Digital Public Health Infrastructure in Sierra Leoneen_US
dc.typeArticleen_US
dc.identifier.citationInnocent C. Ndubuisi-Obi Jr, Nuole Chen, and Lily L. Tsai. 2025. Becoming Infrastructure: A Critical Realist Account of the Evolution of DHIS2 as Digital Public Health Infrastructure in Sierra Leone. Proc. ACM Hum.-Comput. Interact. 9, 7, Article CSCW219 (November 2025), 46 pages.en_US
dc.contributor.departmentMassachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Political Scienceen_US
dc.relation.journalProceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interactionen_US
dc.identifier.mitlicensePUBLISHER_POLICY
dc.eprint.versionFinal published versionen_US
dc.type.urihttp://purl.org/eprint/type/ConferencePaperen_US
eprint.statushttp://purl.org/eprint/status/PeerRevieweden_US
dc.date.updated2025-11-01T07:53:24Z
dc.language.rfc3066en
dc.rights.holderThe author(s)
dspace.date.submission2025-11-01T07:53:25Z
mit.journal.volume9en_US
mit.journal.issue7en_US
mit.licensePUBLISHER_CC
mit.metadata.statusAuthority Work and Publication Information Neededen_US


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