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Framing WSIS in Global Governance Processes: Linkages and Followup

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Mistrust is not a foundation for better governance ... is often a deep chasm of mistrust between governments and civil society, NGOs, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Framing WSIS in Global Governance Processes: Linkages and Followup


1
Framing WSIS in Global Governance Processes
Linkages and Follow-up
  • Professor Robin Mansell
  • President, IAMCR
  • London School of Economics
  • ITeM Parallel Event, 10.45-12.45, 17 November,
    Room Mehdia, Kram Centre, Tunis

2
Why focus on ICTs global governance?
  • Assembling the tools is only part of the task
    Measures must be taken to assemble the human
    capabilities and related technologies to make the
    best use of the new opportunities offered by
    ICTs
  • (Knowledge Societies Mansell Wehn 1998 at
    http//www.sussex.ac.uk/spru/1-4-9-1-1-2.html ).

3
Mainstream approaches promote -
  • A strong ICT diffusion agenda.
  • On-line as superior to off-line services.
  • Top-down policy rather than bottom up
    participatory agendas.
  • Information commodity exchange rather than
    cultural exchange and peer to peer sharing.
  • Claims that
  • broadband connection is essential
  • knowledge management proprietary tools are
    needed
  • generic best practice models can be fitted to
    local contexts

4
Contested power relations in WSIS official
documents
  • Resistance to the right to communicate.
  • Resistance to the need to fully support new
    financing mechanisms.
  • Resistance to more inclusive governance
    mechanisms.
  • Inevitable progress of science and technology
    and neutral in its impact.
  • Weak acknowledgement of the role of the media.
  • Strong emphasis on security issues.
  • Efficiency and productivity gains assumed to be
    associated with ICTs use regardless of context.
  • Intellectual Property protection is important.

5
Alternative approaches promote -
  • Knowledge societies are highly differentiated.
  • Some ICTs are valued others are not.
  • Legitimate forms of resistance to
    technology-driven agendas.
  • Valued uses of ICTs grow out of local initiative.
  • Need to tackle unequal power relations.

6
Essential Actions
  • Promoting open source and open exchange.
  • Relaxing the grip of intellectual property rights
    managers.
  • Creative thinking and acting to promote new
    financing mechanisms.
  • Promoting recognition of fundamental human rights
  • Fostering both political and economic momentum.

7
Mistrust is not a foundation for better governance
  • The combined effects of technological limitations
    together with the fact that new ICTs, especially
    the Internet and email, tend to become part and
    parcel of and new expressions of existing
    relations of inequality (Community-based
    specialist)
  • Governments are as adept (as we are) at speaking
    development lingo, they know that participation
    has to appear in the project log frame Peoples
    participation requires a re-negotiation of power
    and those with power rarely want to relinquish
    it. There is often a deep chasm of mistrust
    between governments and civil society, NGOs,
    universities, etc. (UN agency officer)

8
Key questions for future governance
  • What values are being embedded in our knowledge
    societies?
  • Which are the predominant values and what
    structural or procedural means are there to
    resist or change them if they are inconsistent
    with equity?
  • What interventions are realistic, where, and how
    do interventions shape the social, cultural,
    political and economic environment in specific
    cases?
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