
THE REPUBLIC OF UGANDA
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United Nations
Office of the Special Coordinator For
Africa and the Least Developed Countries
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Aide Memoire
BRIDGING THE GENDER DIGITAL DIVIDE
THROUGH STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIPS
Africa Launch of the Digital Diaspora Initiative
and Global Advisory Committee meeting
Kampala, Uganda
(May 5-6, 2003)
Introduction
Information and communications technologies (ICT 1) are
becoming widely accepted as integral means for transforming the path of development.
As envisaged in the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs), the importance of harnessing information and
communication technologies for poverty eradication cannot be
overemphasized. Yet, as statistics describing the growing digital
divide demonstrate, women and girls are at particular risk for
exclusion from opportunities presented by ICT to secure better
livelihoods and other rights.
The particular opportunities presented by ICT as means to foster women's
economic security and rights in Africa, while being tested on a small scale in
the region, remain largely untapped. Constraints of infrastructure, cost and
content as well as gender biases in the use and development of ICT constitute
significant barriers to use for most individual entrepreneurs or micro-
enterprises. Indeed, as the UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan emphasized in his
message to the International Chamber of Commerce on October 30, 2002, "One key
question for (you) to consider is to liberate the entrepreneurial energies of
Africa's people, and how to promote foreign investment in African countries, in
particular the least developed among them".
UNIFEM and its partners recognize that there is a
wealth of untapped expertise
among Africans in the Diaspora, particularly in the private sector, who could
make a significant difference in closing the digital divide. Partnerships
combining the know-how and outreach of agencies such as UNIFEM and its
partners, with those companies and entrepreneurs who are developing and
financing ICT development and deployment open up new avenues for tackling the
feminization of poverty. UNIFEM intends to use the knowledge and expertise of
Africans in the Diaspora to "liberate the entrepreneurial energies" of African
women.
In January 2002 in New York, UNIFEM launched its Digital Diaspora initiative to
build strategic partnerships between African IT entrepreneurs in the Diaspora
and women's organizations and business associations in Africa. The initiative
is aimed at harnessing the financial resources, IT and business expertise of
Africans in the Diaspora to tackle the challenges of feminized poverty. It
seeks to undertake projects that empower women economically through capacity
building in the use of ICTs, identifying business opportunities, creating
business partnerships, and providing access to finance as well as building the
knowledge-base on ICTs for poverty alleviation.
The initiative is guided by a Global Advisory Committee (GAC)
comprised of African ICT entrepreneurs from the Diaspora, ICT experts
and representatives of the private sector and the UN system. A
comprehensive programme to address the gender digital divide in Africa
has been prepared with advise from the GAC and will form the framework
for action under the initiative. Partnership with the UN ICT Task
Force, Digital Partners
and Gruppo Cerfe has been forged in the June 2002
launch of a complementary intiative, the Digital Diaspora Network Africa (DDNA), with chapters in
North America and Europe . A
gender caucus including African women's groups and organizations in
the field of ICT has also been forged to catalyze women's rights and
organizing around the preparatory processes of the World Summit of the
information Society (WSIS).
The New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD), which
the UN General Assembly has endorsed at its 57th session as the framework for the
international community support to Africa, recognizes ICT as one of the
priority sectors for Africa's development, and entrusts African governments to
promote the role of women in society and economic development.
In this context, UNIFEM, UNDP, the Office of the Special Coordinator for Africa
and the Least Developed Countries (OSCAL), the UN ICT Task Force
and the UN Fund for International Partnerships (UNFIP) in collaboration with
the Government of Uganda, plan to launch the initiative in Africa on the occasion
of the second meeting of the Global Advisory Committee.
The outcome of the meeting in Kampala will be presented during the upcoming
meeting of the UN ICT Taskforce, in September 2003, and will inform the ongoing
process of the World Summit for the Information Society (WSIS).
Objectives
The main objective of the meeting is to launch the programme of action of the
Digital Diaspora Initiative in Africa, expanding the constituency of support by
bringing on board other stakeholders from governments, civil society, donors
and the private sector; and forging synergy between the efforts of the GAC,
DDNA and the Gender Caucus of the WSIS.
More specifically, it is intended to:
- Provide an opportunity for participants to learn from some innovative
approaches to using ICT for gender responsive poverty eradication and
development in Uganda.
- Explore the specificity of the gender digital divide in Africa and
learn about strategies and experiences that have been used to enhance women's
access to ICT and IT female entrepreneurship in Africa;
- Share information and ideas about the programme for bridging the gender
digital divide through strategic partnerships with a wider audience;
- Expand partnership opportunities with governments, civil society
organizations, the private sector, donors and UN Agencies towards implementing
the initiative.
Expected outcomes
- Initiative launched in Africa, with a wider constituency of support at
the regional level;
- Implementation plan for the programme "Bridging the Digital Divide
through Strategic Partnerships" outlined;
- Identified and shared issues on the use of ICT in the empowerment of
women and the eradication of poverty in Africa;
- Identified partners for specific programmes at regional, sub regional
and national levels, including within UN agencies, civil society organisations,
private sector and governments;
- Linkages and partnerships forged between GAC members, African
Governments and African women's organizations active in the field of gender and
technology;
The meeting provides a special opportunity to build partnerships between
Ugandan local ICT initiatives and the African Diaspora, as well as enhance
gender responsiveness of poverty eradication efforts for Sustainable Human
Development in Uganda. The expected outcomes for the host country are
identified as follows:
- Having made considerable progress in the fight against poverty, Uganda
can consolidate these achievements through taking the lead in the use of ICT as
a tool for development through addressing gender concerns.
- Create an Africa wide partnership using the Africa Diaspora as an
engine of bridging the gender digital gap.
- Define a wide participation to galvanize the local potential to
interface with Diaspora ICT experts and entrepreneurs to enrich the local ICT
outlook and utility and at the same time procure strategic partnerships and
collaboration with other development partners
Participants
Participants will include the GAC members, selected members of the Digital
Diaspora Network Africa (Europe and USA chapters), government officials,
parliamentarians, representatives of African Union and NEPAD, civil society
organizations and representatives of donor organizations and the UN System.
Methodology
A combination of plenary presentations, roundtable discussions, field trip and
group work will be used to address the objectives of the meeting. The speakers
will make brief presentations (3-4 minutes) on key issues of gender and ICT
that can be addressed through strategic partnerships with the Digital Diaspora.
The discussants will draw the most salient points from the panel discussions,
to inform the working group session.
Dates and Venue
May 5-6, 2003
Nile International Conference Centre, Kampala, Uganda,
Language
The official language of the meeting will be English.
Digital Diaspora Official Launch and Conference Opening
The Digital Diaspora Official Launch and Conference Opening is by H.E. Yoweri Museveni, President of the Republic of Uganda.
Click here for the two-day conference programme.
For further information contact:
Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social Development:
UNIFEM: Ilaria Carnevali - ilaria.carnevali@undp.org
UNDP: Ngila Mwase - ngila.mwase@undp.org
OSCAL: Seok-Ran Kim - kim3@un.org
UNFIP: Natalie Hahn - hahnn@un.org
UN ICTTF: Sergei Kambalov - kambalov@un.org
1 New Information and Communications Technologies (ICTs), as referred to in this
programme, include a wide range of technologies and tools, including the Internet, mobile phones, videoconferencing, and others.
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