Aide-Mémoire
I. Introduction
The Division for the Advancement of Women (),
in cooperation with the International Telecommunications Union ()
and the ,
is organizing an expert group meeting (EGM) on "Information and communication technologies and
their impact on and use as an instrument for the advancement and
empowerment of women". The meeting will take place in the Republic
of Korea from 11 to 14 November 2002.
The Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action (PfA), adopted
by the Fourth World Conference on Women in 1995, drew attention
to the emerging global communications network and its impact on
public policies, and private attitudes and behaviour. It called
for the empowerment of women through enhancing their skills, knowledge,
access to and use of information technologies. The twenty-third
special session of the General Assembly, held in June 2000 to review
progress made in implementation of the Platform for Action, recognized
the increased opportunities created by information and communication
technologies (ICT) for women to contribute to knowledge sharing,
networking and electronic commerce activities. It also noted that
poverty, lack of access and opportunities, illiteracy, including
computer illiteracy, and language barriers prevented some women
from using ICT, including the Internet. Steps were proposed to ensure
that women benefited fully from ICT, including equal access to ICT-related
education, training and entrepreneurship opportunities, and equal
access as producers and consumers of ICT through public and private
partnerships.
The role of ICT as a tool for development has attracted
the sustained attention of the 51³Ô¹Ï. In 2000, the Economic
and Social Council adopted a Ministerial Communiqué on the role
of information technology in the context of a knowledge-based economy.
Later that year, the Millennium Declaration underscored the urgency
of ensuring that the benefits of new technologies, especially ICT,
be available to all. In 2001, the Council considered the role of
ICT for development in the context of partnerships with relevant
stakeholders, including the private sector. In June 2002, the General
Assembly will hold a two-day meeting devoted to ICT for development
(17 and 18 June). A World Summit on the Information Society, with
the ITU as lead organizing entity, will take place in 2003 (Geneva)
and 2005 (Tunisia).
Based on recommendations of the ECOSOC, a United
Nations ICT Task Force was launched in November 2001 to help harness
the power of ICT for advancing the goals contained in the Millennium
Declaration, in particular the goal of halving the number of people
living in extreme poverty by 2015. The Task Force's mission statement
and action plan recognize the potential of ICT for promoting gender
equality, and for enhancing women's educational, health and economic
opportunities, and for participation in public life.
The Commission on the Status of Women, as part of its multi-year
programme of work for 2002-2006, decided to consider the topic "Participation
and access of women to the media, and information and communication
technologies and their impact on and use as an instrument for the
advancement and empowerment of women" as a priority theme at its
upcoming session in 2003. The Commission's deliberations should
also serve as a contribution to the World Summit on the Information
Society. (The theme "participation and access of women to the media"
will be the subject of a separate expert group meeting.)
II. Background
Information and communication technologies are usually understood
to include computers, the rapidly improving communications technologies,
including radio, television and mobile telephony, as well as networking
and electronic data processing capacities, and the software for
applications of these new technologies and capacities. Their defining
characteristic is the capacity to harness, access and apply information
and diffuse knowledge at electronic speed to all types of human
activity, thereby giving rise to contemporary knowledge-based economies
and societies.
This digital revolution is rapidly transforming social, economic,
cultural and political interactions the world over. The Internet
is emerging as a source of considerable potential for individuals,
businesses and countries. In the year 2000, the Internet had 150.000
new users per day and 2 million web-pages were added daily. E-commerce,
or e-business, is projected to grow from $45 million in 1998 to
$7 trillion in 2004 1. Knowledge and information are essential in
taking advantage of the opportunities presented by ICT, and have
become commodities of value in their own right in the networked
economy.
ICT have the potential to create new types of economic activity
and employment opportunities, and enhance the quality of life. They
have changed the nature of work, the range of occupations and skills
requirements, making it necessary for workers to acquire a broader,
and more adaptable knowledge base. E-commerce is creating opportunities
for even small firms to market their products and services directly
in a globalizing market. Education and training, and access to relevant
institutions, are critical factors in taking advantage of ICT-related
opportunities. At the same time, ICT are transforming education
itself, and are creating new possibilities for achieving educational
goals. Distance learning, lifelong education, alternatives to formal
education, as well as community-based learning are among the areas
where important ICT-based applications are emerging. ICT have also
brought improvements to health-care delivery, research and training,
and the health sector has become one of the major areas where knowledge
is shared and used through ICT. As an information- and knowledge-based
tool, ICT have vast potential for participation, networking and
advocacy among citizens, and for a variety of purposes. ICT also
provide the means for enhancing interaction between Governments
and their citizens, and can foster transparency and accountability
of governance. National development frameworks are increasingly
integrating components to enhance ICT access and use, legislative
and regulatory aspects of ICT, and public-private partnerships for
ICT.
The potential of ICT for stimulating economic growth, social
development and political participation is recognized, but it is
increasingly apparent that the benefits are unevenly distributed
between and within countries, to a large extent because of differential
access to ICT, and differences in the knowledge base needed for
optimal use of ICT. This has been coined the "digital divide", or
"information poverty", to describe the difference between those
countries, regions, sectors and socio-economic groups which have
the resources and capabilities to access knowledge through ICT,
and use ICT for a multitude of purposes, and those lacking such
access and capabilities. It brings into focus the growing inequalities
and income disparities, and inequitable patterns of development
between and within countries. It is estimated that less than 8%
of the world's population currently benefits from the Internet 2.
There are three time more PC's in the Americas than in Africa and
the 400.000 citizens of Luxembourg have more international Internet
bandwidth than Africa's 760 Million citizens 3.
Even within regions, it remains a small minority of each society that has access to the
global ICT network. Factors such as gender, levels of education
and literacy, income, language, and race and ethnicity are critical
determinants of access within countries. While the number of people
connected to the global information society is expected to continue
to grow very rapidly, the underlying patterns of differential access
and benefit are unlikely to change without concerted efforts.
Women are increasingly taking advantage of ICT in all spheres of life,
thus confirming that ICT can be a tool to promote gender equality
and enhance the economic, political and social empowerment of women.
At the same time, a "gender divide" within the digital divide is
apparent and reflected not only in the lower numbers of women users
of ICT, compared to men, but also in the persistence of gender-specific
structural inequalities that constitute barriers to access. In particular,
persistent inequalities between women and men at all levels of decision-making
constitute serious constraints to women's participation in shaping
the role of ICT as a tool for development. Furthermore, as ICT reshape
the world of work and commerce, educational opportunities and health
systems, they have the potential to perpetuate existing gender-based
inequalities in access, use and opportunities, as well as perpetuating
gender-based educational, employment, health-related and other disadvantages
for women. They may also create new forms of inequality between
women and men.
It is thus essential to focus on the gender dimensions
of the digital divide, not only to prevent adverse impact of the
digital revolution on gender equality and to enhance women's equitable
access to the benefits of ICT, but also to ensure that ICT can become
a central tool for women's empowerment and the promotion of gender
equality. Policies need to ensure that the gender perspectives of
ICT access and use are fully addressed so that ICT actively promote
gender equality, and ensure that gender-based disadvantages are
not created or perpetuated.
III. Objectives
The expert group meeting will consider the impact of ICT on women and their use as a tool
for the empowerment of women and the promotion of gender equality,
in selected areas. It will address the challenges and benefits women
encounter with regard to ICT and explore ways to close the gender-based
digital divide. It will develop policy recommendations and concrete
actions to be taken at national, regional and international levels,
and by a variety of actors, that aim at securing the full benefit
of ICT in pursuit of gender equality and the advancement and empowerment
of women. In particular, the expert group meeting will address the
following areas:
- National ICT policies and gender equality: Because of
the growing impact of ICT on development, national development
policies increasingly include attention to ICT. Such policies,
including by setting the overall direction and priorities, and
through regulatory approaches, shape ICT use, as well as the impact
of ICT on national development. It is therefore essential to ensure
that ICT components of national development policies are supportive
of gender equality goals. The meeting will consider both the content
of such ICT policies and the processes through which they are
formulated. It will adopt recommendations which aim to ensure
that Governments integrate gender perspectives into their national
ICT policies and fully address the concerns and priorities of
gender equality policies.
- ICT as an instrument for participation: The participation
of women in decision-making is a critical element in ensuring
gender-sensitive approaches and outcomes. ICT have the potential
for overcoming many of the constraints to communication among
individuals and groups in society. Increasingly, women are using
ICT for networking and advocacy, and for enhancing their interaction
with Government at different levels. The meeting will analyse
ways in which ICT are enhancing women's capacity to act in the
public sphere. It will also analyse ways in which ICT can provide
a context for Governments to work more effectively for women,
through increased quality and accessibility of public services,
greater accountability and transparency, and enhanced participation
of women in decision-making processes. It will develop recommendations
for enhancing women's role in participation and decision-making
at all levels and in all areas, and for improving gender-responsive
participatory governance.
- ICT as an instrument for enhancing women's capabilities:
Knowledge and information are necessary to ensure optimum benefit
from ICT. At the same time, ICT are themselves a source of knowledge
and information. Knowledge and information are also essential
ingredients for empowerment. The meeting will analyse ways to
ensure that ICT are a tool for enhancing women's knowledge and
information base, and thus their empowerment. Focusing on a selected
number of areas, the meeting will make recommendations to ensure
that women have opportunities to develop the necessary skills
for using ICT, especially to enhance their education, training,
and health. It will also recommend actions to enhance women's
capacity to produce ICT-based knowledge and information, and applications.
It will further discuss the content of information and knowledge
available through the Internet from a gender perspective, and
make related recommendations.
- ICT as an instrument for women's economic empowerment:
At the same time as ICT are creating new economic opportunities,
they are also undermining some traditional or existing bases of
livelihoods. The meeting will suggest measures for enhancing women's
skills to take advantage of new economic opportunities, avoiding
women's segregation into lower-paying ICT-related sectors, and
strengthening women's access to new business and entrepreneurship
opportunities, including through e-commerce.
IV. Expected outcome
The outcome of the expert group meeting will be a report containing
a summary of the discussion and recommendations addressed to different
actors at different levels on ICT as a tool for the empowerment
of women and the promotion of gender equality. The report will be
widely distributed, including through the DAW Website. The findings
and conclusions of the expert group meeting will also provide the
basis for a report of the Secretary-General on this theme to the
Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) in 2003. The outcome of
the Commission's consideration of this theme will be a contribution
to the World Summit on the Information Society (Geneva, 2003 and
Tunis, 2005).
V. Methods of Work
The expert group meeting will work in plenary session and in smaller working groups, based on the major
issues identified.
VI. Profile of Participants
The expert group meeting will be attended by 8 - 10 experts appointed by the Secretary-General
of the 51³Ô¹Ï, as well as observers from Governments, entities
of the 51³Ô¹Ï system, intergovernmental organizations and
non-governmental organizations. The 51³Ô¹Ï will provide
travel and daily subsistence allowance to the experts and consultants.
In selecting the experts, the criteria of geographical and gender
balance will be respected. The participants will be drawn from a
variety of fields and expertise in accordance with the objectives
identified above.
VII. Documentation
The documentation for the meeting will include:
- background papers by the Division for the Advancement of Women
and a consultant's paper, commissioned by the DAW, outlining the
major issues to be discussed;
- a paper prepared by the ITU;
- papers prepared by the experts on specific issues or case studies in line
with their expertise.
Observers will be invited to contribute inputs from their own perspectives. The expert group meeting
will be conducted in English only. The documentation will also be in English only.
All relevant correspondence should be addressed to:
Christina Brautigam, Chief Gender Analysis Section
Division for the Advancement of Women,
Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Room DC2-1244
51³Ô¹Ï, New York, NY 10017 U.S.A
Tel: (212) 963-0535, Fax: (212) 963-3463
Email: brautigamc@un.org
1
"Report of the high-level panels of experts on information and communication
technology" (A/55/75, E/2000/55)
2 ITU World Telecommunication Development Report 2002
3 ITU World Telecommunication Development Report 2002
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