[WSIS CS-Plenary] WSISPapers Newsletter No.5 - The challenge of developing ICTs in Africa

WSIS Papers wsis2 at item.org.uy
Fri Feb 25 16:17:41 GMT 2005



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  WSIS Papers Newsletter -  February 2005 No.5
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 In this issue: THE CHALLENGE OF DEVELOPING ICTs IN AFRICA


 Content:

 - Africa in the global telecommunications map
 - Information on ICTs development in Africa
 - ICTD Policies in Africa
 - ICTs as a global pubic good
 - Africa at the WSIS



 Available online at:

       http://wsispapers.choike.org/

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 Sub-Saharan Africa consists of thirty-four of the fifty least developing
 countries and fourteen of the thirty-two landlocked countries that are
 confronted with the most daunting economic, social and political
challenges.

 Despite progress in expanding the reach of basic and new ICT services and
 applications in African countries, the majority of the population still
does
 not have access to telephone service, computers and the Internet. Moreover,
 there is a wide and uneven disparity along the fault lines of social
 inequality such as socio-economic status, age, gender, geographic location
 and ethnicity.

 Bilateral and multilateral agencies, the United Nations bodies and
 foundations have played a key role in advancing the diffusion of ICT in the
 region and fostering enabling environment for the participation of the
private sector in the delivery of services. However, despite optimism about
 the capacity of the private sector and direct foreign investment in the
ICT,
the outcomes of privatisation and liberalization have not been that
successful in Africa.

 The large flows of private investment have benefited only a handful
 countries such as South Africa, Tunisia, Egypt and Morocco where
 infrastructure has well-developed already. Furthermore, privatisation did
 not lead to automatic increase of the number of users or bring the costs of
 access down, while the imposition of free-market conditions onto the
 inequitable conditions in the region has simply reinforced the iniquitous
 status quo and in some cases led to transfer from public monopoly to
private
 one.

 Although competitive markets represent one of the alternative options to
 promote universal service, there has always been a large segment of the
 African population whose needs was not met by markets. Africa has the
 largest segment of the population that is below the poverty line and with
 weak purchasing power whose needs should be met by alternative financing
 mechanisms that extend beyond the borders of the market.

 Two main alternatives have been considered to bridge the access gaps: The
 Digital Solidarity Fund and the Global Public Goods framework. The first
 proposal was made by President Abdoulaye Wade of Senegal during the first
 phase of World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) and the Fund was
 established as a legal foundation in Geneva securing contributions from
 cities and local authorities. While the enthusiasm is high particularly at
 the level of key regional organizations and some countries, there is
growing
 uncertainty about a long-term "charity-based" strategy for ICT development.

 On the other hand, the global public goods approach has become an important
 and an alternative framework for justification for financing mechanisms
that
 go beyond what the market supplies. It argues that extending access to the
 Information Society in developing countries is a global public good that
 benefits everyone because of the value of network externalities. In other
 words, since the global economy runs on global information networks to
 create a global marketplace, the private sector in developed countries
 stands to benefit from the extension of ICTs in developing countries and
 should help pay for ICT for development as a global public good.

 ICT development in Africa also faces other constraints apart from lack of
 access. For example, unresolved problems of governance and injustice at the
 local levels and the dynamics of the global economic systems seriously
 hinder any effective ICT policy implementation.

 Likewise, African countries' participation in global governance issues and
 their access to trade and debt relief are critical for their improved
 participation in information society. Financing the mainstreaming of ICTs
in
 health and education will make sense only accompanied by policies that
 ensure new and additional resources and if the problem of the debt burden,
 which makes it virtually impossible for African governments to maintain
 adequate programmes of public education and health, are seriousy addressed.

 For this reason, the discourse on financing ICT for development following
 the WSIS process should therefore encompass frank evaluation of the
 impediments associated with local governance, the global trade regime and
 the broader debates on debt relief.


 Based on the paper "Financing ICTs for development with focus on poverty"
by Lishan Adam



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 Africa in the global telecommunications map
 -------------------------------------------------------

 *  African Telecommunication Indicators
 ITU
 This report provides facts and figures for the African region and market
 trends. Published in 2004.
 -->http://www.itu.int/ITU-D/ict/publications/africa/2004/index.html


 *  Least developing countries resources
  UN
 Information on the economic, social and cultural situation of Africa.
 -->http://www.un.org/issues/m-ldc.asp


 *  Millenium development goals indicators
 UN
 Population, social, economic, and cultural development statistics, as well
 as access to information and communication technologies figures.
 -->http://millenniumindicators.un.org/unsd/mispa/mi_worldregn.aspx


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 Information on ICTs development in Africa
 -------------------------------------------------------

 *  Research ICT Africa
 This site provides in-depth research on information communication
technology
 (ICT) policy and regulatory research capacity in Africa needed to informed,
 effective governance.
 -->http://www.researchictafrica.net/


 * APC Africa ICT Policy Monitor
 This project of the Association for Progressive Communications (APC) aims
to
 enable African civil society organizations to engage in information and
 communication technologies (ICT) policy development to promote an
 Information Society based on social justice and human rights.
 -->http://africa.rights.apc.org/en-about-monitor.shtml


 * African Information Society Initiative (AISI)
 UN Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA)
 The African Information Society Initiative (AISI) is an action framework
 that has been a basis for information and communication activities in
Africa
 since 1996.
 -->http://www.uneca.org/aisi


 * Acacia
 The Acacia initiative is an international program to empower sub-Saharan
 communities with the ability to apply information and communication
 technologies (ICTs) to their own social and economic development.
 -->http://www.acacia.org.za/


 * Catalysing Access to ICT in Africa (CATIA)
 The Catalysing Access to ICT in Africa (CATIA) programme aims to enable
poor
 people in Africa to gain maximum benefit from the opportunities offered by
 Information and Communication Technology (ICT) and to act as a strong
 catalyst
 for reform. It will support a package of strategic activities to improve
 affordable access to the full range of ICTs, from Internet to community
 radio.
 -->http://www.catia.ws/


 * LINK Centre
 University of the Witwatersrand
 The LINK Centre is the leading research and training body in the field of
 information and communications technology (ICT) policy, regulation and
 management in Southern Africa. LINK focuses on capacity building in the
 public
 sector and development arenas through quality training, applied research
and
 consultancy services necessary to maximise the benefits of the Information
 Society and the Knowledge Economy.
 -->http://link.wits.ac.za/research/research.html



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 ICTD Policies in Africa
 -------------------------------------------------------

 *   Information Technology Centre for Africa (ITCA)
 UN Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA)
 The Information Technology Centre for Africa (ITCA) is an information and
 communication technology (ICT) focused exhibition and learning centre to
 demonstrate to African policy makers and planners the value of ICT for
 development.
 -->http://www.uneca.org/itca/


 *   Financing ICTs for development with focus on poverty
 WSIS Papers
 Lishan Adam
 Addressing the needs of the poor is an intrinsically decentralized and
 contextual exercise that requires innovative and distributed financing. A
 systematic effort to understand the needs of poor, their social and
 political context and the constraints placed on them due to lack of ICTs
 would make ICTs more meaningful to those who need information and knowledge
 the most; identify innovative approaches for making provisions for those
who
 cannot afford access to them and reduce wasteful expenditure, by avoiding
 transplanting applications that worked in developed countries to the
 contexts of poor regions. PDF document.
 -->http://www.choike.org/documentos/financing_icts_poverty.pdf


 * Information and Communication Technologies, Poverty and Development
 School of Environment and Development
 Richard Heeks
 The paper investigates the role of ICTs in assisting the development of
 small and micro-enterprises in poverty alleviation.
 -->http://www.sed.manchester.ac.uk/idpm/publications/wp/di/di_wp05.htm



 * Policy and regulatory challenges of access and affordability
 Lirne.net
 Alison Gillwald
 Affordable access and the skills to utilise increasingly advanced but
essential services remain the central public interest issues for regulators
in the area of information and communication technologies (ICTs). Pdf
document.
 -->http://www.lirne.net/resources/netknowledge/gillwald.pdf



 * The development divide in a digital age: an issue paper
 UNRISD
 Cynthia Hewitt de Alcántara
 This paper considers the role that ICTs can realistically be expected to
 play in improving the level of living and quality of life of people in
 different parts of the world. It focuses above all on low-income countries,
 where most development assistance efforts are concentrated and where the
 challenge of utilizing ICTs effectively is greatest.>
http://www.unrisd.org/unrisd/website/document.nsf/d2a23ad2d50cb2a280256eb300
 385855/19b0b342a4f1cf5b80256b5e0036d99f/$FILE/hewitt.pdf

 *  National ICT policies making in Africa: Implications for CSOs
 Social Science Research Council
 Lishan Adam
 The gap between expectations and realization in e-strategies suggests that
 civil society has a key role in stimulating national ICT polices. Pdf
 document.
 -->http://www.ssrc.org/programs/itic/publications/knowledge_report/memos/ad
a
 mmemo4.pdf


 *  Integrating information and communication technologies in development
 programmes
 OECD
 ICTs can play a key role in development and poverty reduction. ICTs can
help
 promote economic growth, expand economic and social opportunity, make
 institutions and markets more efficient and responsive, and make it easier
 for the poor to obtain access to resources and services. PDF document.
 -->http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/2/57/20611917.pdf



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 ICTs as a global pubic good
 -------------------------------------------------------

 *  Financing the information society in the South: A global public goods
 perspective
 APC
 Pablo Accuosto, Niki Johnson
This paper sets out to look at the question of financing the provision of
 information and communication technologies (ICTs) in the South, within the
 context of the United Nations' World Summit on the Information Society, and
 advocates adopting a "global public goods" perspective on the issue. June
 2004. PDF document.
 -->http://rights.apc.org/documents/financing.pdf


 *  Financial mechanisms for the information society from a global public
 goods perspective
 WSIS Papers
 Fernando Prada
 The global public googds approach allows to recognize the information
 society building blocks according to the vision, aspirations and values
that
 define it. Identifying its components makes it possible to explore a range
of specific financial options for this public good in particular. PDF
 document.
-->http://www.choike.org/documentos/financing_is_gpgs.pdf




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 Africa at the WSIS
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 * Africa Regional WSIS Preparatory Meeting (Accra, 2-4 February 2005)
 The African Regional Preparatory Conference for the WSIS, in Accra, with
the
 theme "Access: Africa's key to an inclusive Information Society" was aimed
 at prepararing Africa for an effective participation in the second phase of
 the WSIS and to ensure a strategic and interdependent digital partnership
 that would promote economic growth and human development of the continent.
 -->http://www.wsisaccra2005.gov.gh/


 *  African Participation in WSIS: review and discussion paper
 APC
 David Souter
 This paper presents a review of African participation in the first phase
 WSIS process. It is not intended as a comprehensive analysis, but to
 stimulate discussion about ways in which African participation -
 particularly that of African civil society - can be more effectively
structured during the second phase of the summit. PDF document
 -->http://rights.apc.org/documents/africa_wsis_review.pdf


 * Financing ICTD in Africa
 APC Africa
 The Plan of Action adopted at the World Summit on the Information Society
in
 Geneva 2003 requested the Secretary General of the United Nations to create
 a Task Force to study the issue of financial mechanisms for ICT for
 Development (ICTD) and present a report to facilitate discussions in the
 second phase of WSIS. This is the African perspective of the report.
 -->http://africa.rights.apc.org/index.shtml?apc=29740se_1&x=30657


 *  Digital Solidarity Fund (DSF)
 When the first phase of the WSIS failed to make a firm commitment with
 regard to new financial mechanisms for ICT development in the South, the
mayors of Lyon and Geneva joined with Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade
 commited 1 million euros to launch the a DSF themselves. This fund is
 sustained through the voluntary commitment of public authorities and/or
 private entities who decide to implement the "Geneva Principle", which
 involves a 1% contribution on public ICT procurement contracts, paid by the
 vendor on his profit margin.
 -->http://www.dsf-fsn.org/



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 Related Choike's in-depth reports
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 * World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS)
 --> http://www.choike.org/nuevo_eng/informes/703.html

 * Accessibility
 --> http://www.choike.org/nuevo_eng/informes/643.html

 * The right to communicate
 --> http://www.choike.org/nuevo_eng/informes/1215.html

 * Economic, social and cultural rights
 --> http://www.choike.org/nuevo_eng/informes/1438.html

 * New Partnership for African Development (NEPAD)
 --> http://www.choike.org/nuevo_eng/informes/1262.html

 * Millennium Development Goals - MDGs
 --> http://www.choike.org/nuevo_eng/informes/302.html


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 - "WSIS Papers" and "Choike" are projects of the
 Instituto del Tercer Mundo (ITeM) -  Third World Institute

 - "WSIS Papers" is supported by the
 International Development Research Centre (IDRC) / PanAmericas
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