Projects
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Photos from and about APC projects.
The APC Africa ICT Policy Monitor’s primary goal is to enable African civil society organisations to engage in ICT policy development processes in order to promote an information society based on social justice and human rights.
In 2008 APC launched the new multilingual APC website with an entirely revamped web platform.
The APC Betinho Communications Prize was launched to mark APC’s tenth anniversary in 2000, and to recognise and document outstanding examples of how the internet can make a real difference for the world’s communities today.
CATIA was a three-year project to enable Africans to gain maximum benefits from the opportunity offered by ICTs and to act as catalysts for policy reform.
CILAC is an APC project and network which is conducting research that will identify obstacles to universal affordable access to ICT infrastructure in the Andean sub-region.
GEM is a guide to integrating a gender analysis into evaluations of initiatives that use information and communication technologies (ICTs) for social change.
GenderIT.org is a website for women’s movements, ICT advocates and policy makers who want to ensure that ICT policy meets women’s needs and does not infringe on their rights.
This annual watchdog report from APC and the Third World Institute, launched in 2007, monitors commitments by governments and the United Nations on the information society.
The Hafkin prize was established to honour Dr. Nancy J. Hafkin, a true pioneer of networking, and development information and communications in Africa, over the course of a twenty-three year career. APC’s objective is to recognize African ICT efforts, and to extract some of the lessons learned in order to make them accessible to others doing related work.
The Latin American and Caribbean (LAC) ICT Policy Monitor was involved in a number of research activities during 2006.
During the Sixteen Days of Activism against Gender Violence each year from 2006, the APC WNSP encourages everyone to “Take Back the Tech!” and reclaim technology for the fight against violence against women – using cell phones, instant messengers, blogs, websites, digital cameras, email, podcasts… The Take Back the Tech! campaign creates awareness on how ICTs are connected to violence against women, strengthens the ICT capacity of women’s rights advocates, creates original and varied content and is building a community to strategise around eliminating violence against women through digital platforms.