Fine-tuning local efforts to bridge digital divide
Fine-tuning local efforts to bridge digital divide
MORE efforts are needed to bridge the digital divide in the country. While
there has been progress in laying the enabling environment through
infrastructural development, information and communications technology (ICT)
needs to be further harnessed to address critical human development concerns
such as poverty, healthcare, education, environmental management and economic
development.
These are some key findings in the summary of the Regional
Human Development Report on Promoting ICT for Human Development in Asia 2004:
Realising Millennium Development Goals.
The report explores how ICT can
promote human development, and identifies the challenges that lie ahead for Asia
towards achieving the Millennium Development Goals endorsed by world leaders in
September 2000. It is based on research conducted in nine countries – China,
India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mongolia, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Vietnam
– and took a year to be completed.
James George Chacko, programme
specialist of the Asia Pacific Development Information Programme, said as far as
Malaysia is concerned, effective partnerships are needed between the public and
private sectors to complement each other’s role in helping to bridge the digital
divide among the communities.
“The successful use and exploitation of
ICT in accelerating human progress and to achieve the clear goals and targets
set by the Millennium Development Goals rests on the perceived interests of all
stakeholders, including the Government, civil society organisations, the private
sector and individuals,” he told Computimes.
“All efforts thus far have
been very sporadic, and there is an urgent need to scale successful pilots to
more extensive applications,” he said.
More emphasis must be placed on a
number of areas, James said, including strengthening the national institutional
mechanisms to support the empowerment of women through the use of ICT and skills
training,
supporting non-governmental organisations in terms of funding and
training for Web site development and administration, building more
multi-cultural and local content Web sites, and continuing to promote ICT-driven
global partnerships.
Simultaneously, more efforts are needed to
strengthen and refine the partnerships necessary to spur the Multimedia Super
Corridor (MSC) to the next level of performance, he added.
According to
James, there is also a need for proper indicators on ICT and the Millennium
Development Goals by the Government. “In assessing the progress of ICT in the
context of achieving any set of socio-economic goals, there would have to be an
emphasis on availability indicators. The critical problem in anchoring ICT
within the Millennium Development Goals is the choice of appropriate indicators
and assigning weightages to these for composition.”
As such, suitable
impact studies on the use of ICT to ascertain its
effectiveness and to
provide useful policy input need to be undertaken, he explained.
James
added that there is an urgent need to go beyond supply-linked indicators (such
as those pertaining to the usage of personal computers, Internet facilities and
density of telephones) to assess whether the technology is promoting the
development process in the desired direction for which information on ICT
applications, purpose of usage, agencies involved and the legal framework
regarding adoption of ICT is needed.
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Last modified 2004-09-29 08:38 PM