| A word to the G8 |
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| Written by Victor van Reijswoud & Amy Mahan | |
| Monday, 04 June 2007 | |
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Page 10 of 11 Ismael Peña-LópezUniversitat Oberta de Catalunya and ICTlogy Richard Heeks took part of the forum and wrote a paper suggesting five ways to get ICTs back on the agenda [of the G8]: 1. Put ICTs back on the G8 agenda, as part of a recognition of science and technology’s role in African development. Heeks asks for openness at all levels. I fully agree: free software, open science, open access journals, open educational resources, etc. seem to me an optimum way to foster endogenous development and south-south cooperation. Indeed, I think this is actually a good way to revert old cooperation trends and strategies (more charity-like) and enter a new path towards empowerment through capacity building. 2. Commit to support at global and national levels for Open Digital Economies that remove the legal and infrastructural barriers to African participation in the digital economy. And, in my opinion, those barriers will be easier to remove if we shifted from “push” to “pull” strategies, by trying to activate the demand for digital content and services. Sustainability (and the entrepreneurs’ interest) is based on this. 3. Initiate a MOT Force - a global collaborative Mobile Opportunities Task Force to harness the development potential of mobile devices. 4. Support a Digital Enterprise Initiative for Africa that would incubate new enterprises, and kickstart the developmental use of outsourcing.
5. Support capacity-building for African ICT-based innovation. I believe that Heeks puts little stress on this point and, to me, is the most important one. He actually states African nations will not become world leaders in fundamental computer and telecommunications science R&D. But, with G8 support, they can become leaders in the development of innovative business and social applications. Well, if projects such as One Laptop Per Child — or the like of it — really succeed, and ICTs are effectively included in everyone’s curriculum in developing countries, new born digital natives can quickly catch up with old-way-of-thinking digital immigrants. And R&D, in intellectual property, is mostly a matter of thinking. I know this is just a guess and quite a simple, frivolous one, but the idea is launched: if globalization and the knowledge society have something good, it might well be something like this.
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