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Dia 1

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Title: Dia 1


1
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2
Agriculture
  • 10 speakers From Ethiopia, Ghana, Hungary,
    India, Jamaica, Jordan, Netherlands, Philippines,
    and Zambia
  • Diverse range of experiences together
    demonstrating the rapid developments in the field
    and several concrete applications of ICTs in
    agriculture, rural development and related areas.
  • Presentations focused on agricultural and
    developmental challenges, showing how ICTs as
    well as information, knowledge and communication
    processes make a difference.

3
Agriculture
  • ICTs are being used in rural areas
  • To power e-commerce marketplaces for farmer
    cooperatives (the Philippines, India) connecting
    buyers and sellers and enabling efficient
    transactions.
  • To automate and enable financial transactions of
    cooperatives, provide local b2b centers for
    farming communities, and provide mobile banking
    services to individual farmers (Philippines).

4
Agriculture
  • ICTs are being used in rural areas
  • To help revolutionize Ethiopian agriculture by
    providing more efficient marketing systems for
    agricultural commodities From a sack of grain
    to a sack of money!
  • To support the social and economic fabric of
    rural villages and communities (Hungary)
    providing services and employment otherwise not
    available.

5
Agriculture
  • ICTs are being used in rural areas
  • To inform planning, land use, and tree planting
    decisions in Ethiopia. Land suitability is mapped
    with GIS to guide decisions on investment (where
    to plant interesting economic plants) and
    conservation (what is happening to the forest
    zone where coffee originated).
  • As part of phytosanitary and farm monitoring and
    traceability systems to track and certify the
    quality of agricultural export products without
    this, farmers would lose access to foreign
    markets and perhaps their livelihoods (Jamaica).

6
Agriculture
  • ICTs are being used in rural areas
  • To help safeguard agricultural biodiversity by
    providing access to catalogues and indexes of
    plant seeds and their characteristics. Such
    genebanks were used to replenish seed lost in
    recent Mozambique floods.

7
Agriculture
  • ICTs are being used by the agricultural
    development community
  • To share experiences among development
    practitioners (India). Community of practice
    members contributed their insights on
    agricultural extension to make future investments
    more effective discussions on school meals and
    nutrition led to real collaborative pilot
    projects.
  • As a knowledge sharing and exchange tool among
    people working on IFAD-sponsored projects in the
    Middle East and North Africa.

8
Agriculture
  • ICTs are being used by the agricultural
    development community
  • To reinforce communication among agricultural
    information specialists worldwide.
  • To globally document and exchange innovative uses
    of information and knowledge and ICTs
    e-agriculture

9
Building the Infrastructure
  • Main issues discussed
  • How to build affordable communication technology
    and infrastructures in developing countries,
    isolated and rural areas.
  • The role of the local telecommunication
    companies.
  • Private and NGO initiatives against the lack of
    investments of the local companies.

10
Building the Infrastructure
  • Main issues discussed (ctd)
  • The difficulties for managing new technologies by
    citizens of D.C. specially in rural areas
  • The need of training people to plan, install,
    maintain and use the communication infrastructure
    and systems.

11
Building the Infrastructure
  • Main conclusions
  • Connecting people should be considered as a need
    not a business
  • Cooperation between local telecommunication
    companies and private/NGO initiatives should be
    encouraged
  • Training programs are essential for the use,
    installation and maintenance of the
    infrastructure and services.

12
Building the Infrastructure
  • Main conclusions (ctd)
  • Monopolistic tendencies should be broken to
    benefit the citizens
  • Public services must play an active role
    providing connectivity
  • Cooperation between countries would facilitate
    the task

13
Economic Opportunities
  • It focused on
  • How can late comers gain from BPO opportunities
  • Opportunities to create wealth by using new
    collaborative tools
  • Potential for open source in developing countries
  • The state of telecentres and its new frontiers

14
Economic Opportunities
  • Emerging thinking from the sessions
  • Developing countries may gain more from focussing
    on emerging models rather than maturing models.
  • They will be better placed in moving up the value
    curve by embracing emerging collaborative tools
    sooner than later.

15
Economic Opportunities
  • Emerging thinking from the sessions
  • 3. Open source is an important option, developing
    countries may choose that as a longer term policy
    and it should be selected as appropriate.
  • 4. Telecentre models in developing countries show
    promise and need the support of the strong,
    affordable and ubiquitous internet infrastructure.

16
Education
  • Issues
  • access, equity quality
  • gender
  • teachers trained in ICT skills and pedagogies
  • implementing ICT policies
  • capacity building at all levels

17
Education
  • Issues
  • lifelong learning
  • content development
  • promoting indigenous languages
  • ownership

18
Education
  • Approaches
  • participatory approaches (wiki, blogs, web 2.0)
  • partnership, collaboration and information
    sharing models

19
Education
  • Approaches
  • integrating infrastructure capacity building
  • flexible alternative delivery mecanisms for
    learning for development

20
Empowerment Participation
  • Building knowledge societies at all levels will
    lead to the empowerment and participation of
    citizens. To achieve this, inclusive ICT policies
    must be developed, implemented and evaluated

21
Empowerment Participation
  • In Africa, public private partnerships are
    already contributing to education and skills
    enhancement programmes, and ICT industry leaders
    are open to proactive governments for more
    collaborations

22
Empowerment Participation
  • Community media centres remain effective in
    bringing empowerment and participation to
    marginalized communities through ICTs , but a
    combination of cost-effective technologies,
    policies, content diversity and private sector
    partnerships need to drive scale-up initiatives

23
Empowerment Participation
  • ICTs should also enhance empowerment and
    participation of the physically challenged and
    other disadvantaged groups of society

24
Environment
  • We recognize that there may be some perceptions
    about environmental ICT that relegate it to a
    lesser standing
  • 1. Does it threaten
  • a) poverty reduction?
  • b) job creation?
  • 2. Is it only about tree-hugging?
  • 3. Is it somehow less important than simply ICT
    penetration?
  • The answers are 1 No and No, 2 No and 3 No !

25
Environment
  • The environment commission is about monitoring,
    modelling and predicting risk to life, health,
    and quality of life when those human rights are
    threatened by
  • flood, storm, seismic and volcanic activity,
    unsustainable agricultural practices,
    unsustainable land use, marginalization of
    indigenous populations, climate change, and so on

26
Environment
  • It is also about communicating those risks, by
    means of ICT-supported community involvement, the
    internet, ad-hoc networks, remote sensing, and
    exploring innovative uses of the traditional
    communications channels (such as wide-casting
    through mobile telephone networks and public
    media) when the environmental risk is extremely
    critical

27
Environment
  • Colleagues from Central America, Asia, Europe,
    and North America carried out a discourse on some
    of the best practices in good science and in
    community involvement. We will continue
    communicating
  • We will reinforce the potential collaboration
    among our active participants this week, on risk
    analysis relating to land and water use and
    abuse, and seismic and volcanic activity for
    starters

28
Environment
  • We proposed to form a special section of IFIP
    Working Group 5.11 (Computers and Environment),
    possibly in collaboration with other IFIP WGs
    such as WG6.9 (Communication Systems for
    Developing Countries)

29
Health
  • 1. Healthcare is very information-intensive and
    has a very high MDG priority ? ICT has potential
    for high developmental impact in healthcare ?
    governments should put more emphasis on
    ehealthcare in national ICT strategies

30
Health
  • 2. There is much fragmentation and duplication
    in national health management information systems
    ? flexible integrated HMIS/HIS are needed,
    integrating manual and e-technologies and data
    from multiple data sources

31
Health
  • 3. ICT is now appropriate for patient-based
    information management also within health
    facilities (clinical use in healthcare
    provision), but there is a need for appropriate
    patient-based software and existing applications
    development efforts are fragmented
  • 4. In appropriate software development, emphasis
    should be on Free and Open Source Software, open
    standards, integration and collaboration ? HELINA
    Collaboration Framework project

32
Health
  • 5. Local holistic health information systems
    capacity-building programmes including training
    for health professionals, university programmes
    and practice-oriented research must be
    developed and sustainably funded

33
Social, ethical legal issues
  • Input was obtained for future work by giving the
    participants an opportunity to indicate what
    legal, ethical and social problems they face with
    respect to ICT-development and what issues they
    wanted addressed by the commission.

34
Social, ethical legal issues
  • The Commission also set up a network of WITFOR
    2007 participants who want to join the knowledge
    exchange of our commission, so as to keep the
    work in Africa going (e.g. discussion list,
    possible future workshops in Africa, etc.) and
    have participants of WITFOR 2007 involved in the
    upcoming WITFOR activities. For this the
    participants listed their names and the topics /
    problems / challenges they are interested in.

35
Social, ethical legal issues
  • All the sessions were well attended and the
    speakers gave comprehensive and thought-provoking
    talks. All sessions concluded with meaningful
    and lively discussions.

36
Social, ethical legal issues
  • Further work will be done the following projects
  • A project in Ethiopia on developing e-learning
    modules for the legal domain (human rights,
    intellectual property as first themes). In doing
    this, benefit from lessons learned with similar
    projects in developing countries among them, a
    project with Siberia.
  • A project on identity theft regulation in South
    Africa. This is very important for states
    intending to maximise both e-commerce and
    e-government as full participation in these
    initiatives exposes personal information to
    exploitation by criminals.

37
Social, ethical legal issues
  • 3. The online portal on the MDGs will be enhanced
    and implemented.
  • 4. The discussion on standards will continue with
    an emphasis on networking and collaboration
    between various states
  • New work will begin on the issues raised by the
    participants such as ICTs and Human Rights, the
    cultural impact of ICTs and the formulation of
    codes of ethics for ICT professionals.
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