Computers, Africa and women... links waiting to happen
JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA, 19 August 2005
ICTs, or information and communication technologies, offer immense possibilities to reduce poverty, improve Europa glossary">governance
and advance gender equality in Africa. But this will happen only if these technologies are made more accessible and consciously applied to achieve these objects. This is the conclusion of a paper on the role of ICTs in the development of African women.Written by Jennifer Radloff (of AAW website">APC-Africa-Women
), Natasha Primo (Women'sNet) and Alice Munyua (APC Africa ICT Policy Monitor Project), the 50-page paper commissioned by APC in August 2004 highlights key issues and challenges faced by women in Africa and to a smaller extent, globally.It touches on a whole range of issues in doing so.
From literacy and education (rather, the lack of it), to language and content, indigenous knowledge and Style information: N/a
Source: "Did You Say "Intellectual Property"? It's a Seductive Mirage" by Richard Stallman
">intellectual property
There are other barriers too -- access, control and effective use; pornography, trafficking, Take Back the Tech! ">violence against women
and censorship; cost, time and mobility; gender segregation in employment; APC">ICT policy and governanceand even the absence of women from decision-making structures.
This paper emphasises current issues. It also lists examples of good practice and includes recommendations to Civil Society Organisations on how to create an ICT for Rural Livelihoods">enabling environment
for women to access and use ICTs for development.One message underlined is the potential ICTs have to boost the economic, political and social empowerment of women, and to promote gender equality.
Useful appendices point to examples that count. This paper's appendices look at community-based access points, schoolnets, and telecentres. There are recommendations for "What is civil society?", initial working definition adopted by the Centre for Civil Society at the London School of Economics">civil society organisations
, and a separate appendix explaining 'what are ICTs'.For those intending to go deeper, there's also a link to recommended resources and "stories for the field" -- including a Uganda-based CD-rom project on giving ideas to rural women in Africa on how to earn money.
From Sierra Leone comes the 'story' of development through radio. The Flamme/Flame initiative teaches the lesson of regional outreach and The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English on Encyclopedia.com">networking
. APC's Hafkin and Betinho prizes encourage innovators usage ofICTs.
Then, the Gender Evaluation Methodology (APC Annual Report 2006 ">GEM
) offers a way of evaluating the impact of ICTs on women's lives. Women's Electronic Network Training (WENT Africa 2003) and the Women'sNet and WOUGNET women's networking initiatives are also pointed to.There are also examples of hope. By way of 'examples of African processes' come UNIFEM's Digital Diaspora Initiative, the NEPAD or New Partnership for Africa's Development, the work of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UN-ECA), specifically its Africa Information Society Initiative (AISI).
(FIN/2005)

