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In a constantly changing world, it is essential for researchers to anticipate the technological developments taking shape and to reflect on the fundamental changes in terms of uses and economic models, and more broadly on changes in society. Research lights our way forward, helping to shape a completely digital but nonetheless entirely human future.

How digital technology is supporting informal employment in Africa

According to a recent World Bank report [1], no more than a quarter of young people in Sub-Saharan Africa will find salaried employment over the next ten years. Most young people will end up working in the same sector as their parents, i.e. on farms and as informal sole traders. This observation is prompting development players to invest in the traditionally neglected informal sector. This public policy shift is being accompanied by a change in the way in which support is provided, with greater emphasis on the need to involve a range of players, including private companies, as part of public-private partnerships (PPP), in line with the new Sustainable Development Goals.
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Continuing education standing the test of its digitalisation

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Game theory: definitely not child’s play…

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Between competition and cooperation: the scramble for knowledge

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Differential Privacy or how to anonymize datas while managing its usage?

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Counting our steps: what do we get out of it?

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Selling one’s behavioral data: an impossible market?

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