Title: Measuring Infostates for Development:
1- Measuring Infostates for Development
- Panel discussion on gender-specific data and
indicators on ICT use and needs - Women in the Information Society
- Statistical evidence and analysis of the gender
digital divide - Heidi Ertl and Heather Dryburgh, Statistics
Canada - November 17, 2005
- Tunis, Tunisia
2WOMEN IN THE INFORMATION SOCIETY
- ICTs and gender is a new component of the Digital
Divide project - Project rationale and objectives
- Structure of the chapter
- Quantitative
- Qualitative
- Highlights of findings
3- Project rationale
- Call for reliable and comparable gender-specific
indicators on ICTs (WSIS Plan of Action) - Scarcity of gender-related ICT measurements and
analyses - scope of coverage and degree of detail
- Need to quantify gender digital divide
4- Project objectives
- Construct pilot database
- Extensive compilation of sex-disaggregated
statistical data on ICTs and gender - Dealing with limitations and challenges
- Conduct analysis
- Quantitative analysis supported by the database
- Analysis of a qualitative nature to begin to
address outcomes and impacts of ICTs for women
5- Structure of the chapter
- Quantitative analysis - what do the numbers tell
us? - Supported by the database and attempts to close
existing measurement gaps - Contains statistical evidence and analysis of
womens experiences in both developed and
developing countries - Magnitude and evolution of gender digital divide
with respect to - Access and patterns of use
- ICT literacy, education and skills
- ICT employment
- Other digital divides
6- Qualitative analysis
- Take into account information of a qualitative
nature related to individual country
circumstances, social norms, histories, cultures,
etc - Focus on developing regions of Africa, Latin
America and Asia - Analysis based on established framework of gender
issues in ICT
7- Elements of the gender digital divide
- Do women have
- Access to ICTs?
- Use of the information and knowledge generated in
the Information Society? - Input into the design, development and
application of ICTs? - The benefits associated with the opportunities
and resources of the Information Society?
8- Highlights
- Womens participation in the Information Society,
particularly in the developing countries of the
world, lags behind that of men
Exposure to mass media by sex (), Ethiopia, 2000
Source Central Statistical Authority, Addis
Ababa, Ethiopia
9- Mobile penetration by sex, selected African
countries, 2004
of individuals
Source SAfrica E-Access and Usage Index,
Research ICT Africa!
10- In many developing countries, gender gaps that
accompany the introduction of newer ICTs are
dramatic - Less than 10 of Internet users in Guinea are
women - Less than 20 in Nepal
- Less than 25 in India
- But gender gaps persist even in developed
countries with higher ICT penetration rates
11Home access to ICTs by sex, selected Scandinavian
countries, 2002
female / male ratio ()
Source Statistics Norway, Nordic Information
Society Statistics 2002
12Selected ICT indicators by sex, Taiwan, China,
2004
Source Taiwan Network Information Centre,
Internet Broadband Usage in Taiwan
13- At the same time, some countries with very low
overall Internet penetration do not experience a
gender divide - In Mongolia, the Philippines and Thailand, female
Internet penetration exceeds male - What can be said about the relationship between
the overall digital divide and the gender digital
divide?
14 Source ITU, World Telecommunication Indicators
2004 and selected national sources
15- Thus
- Closing the digital divide will not automatically
close the gender digital divide - Even where the access and use divides are closed,
other gender divides remain with respect to - Location and patterns of use
- Literacy, education and skills
- ICT employment and occupations
16- Location and patterns of use
- Do women and men use ICTs differently?
- Girls at school use the Internet as much as boys
- Women are less frequent and less intense users of
ICTs - Women use ICTs for a less diverse range of
activities - However
- Women and men use email similarly, and
- Women are much more likely than men to use the
Internet to search for, or use, health or medical
information or services
17(No Transcript)
18- Within-country differences gender gaps in ICT
use vary depending on the ICT - Across-country differences some countries
clearly do better on all ICTs than others
19Use of selected ICTs, selected OECD countries,
2003
female / male ratio
Source Statistics Canada and OECD,
International Adult Literacy and Life Skills
Survey 2005
20Use of selected ICTs, selected OECD countries,
2003
female / male ratio
BERMUDA HIGH-USE
Source Statistics Canada and OECD,
International Adult Literacy and Life Skills
Survey 2005
21Use of selected ICTs, selected OECD countries,
2003
female / male ratio
ITALY LOW-USE
Source Statistics Canada and OECD,
International Adult Literacy and Life Skills
Survey 2005
22- To better understand why men use ICTs more
frequently, spend more time, and engage in more
diverse uses we need to know - Cultural and social expectations
- Womens involvement in conceptualization, design
and implementation of ICTs
23- Literacy, education and skills
- Do women have the education and training
required to - use ICTs effectively?
- Literacy What are the implications for access
to ICTs? - Education What is the link between education
and ICTs? - Science and Technology Education Are women
gaining a voice in conceptualization and design?
24- Womens literacy rates alone are not good
predictors of either the percentage female in
tertiary education, or the percentage female of
ICT users. - The advantages associated with women having
access to tertiary education tend to also mean
they have access to ICTs, but not always.
25- Two stories
- Literacy rates are for the total population
- Tertiary education is available to a select few,
depending on class, race, government policy and
other factors
26- South Africa
- Internet penetration less than 10
- Percent female using the Internet about half
- Literacy rates Women 4 points lower than men
- Tertiary education enrolments Women higher
- Bulgaria
- Internet penetration about 10
- Percent female using the Internet about 10
- Literacy rates Women and men equal
- Tertiary education enrolments Women slightly
higher
27- Mongolia
- Internet penetration around 2
- Percent female using the Internet highest
- Literacy rates Women and men equal
- Tertiary education enrolments Women 1.5 times
higher
- Yemen
- Internet penetration about 12
- Percent female using the Internet about 14
- Literacy rates Women 28 vs men 70
- Tertiary education enrolments Women less than
one third
28- Are women equal partners in technological
development and technology governance? - Input into the problems technologies address
- Input into the way technology is integrated into
society - Science and technology education
- Science and technology work
29- Three main findings on education in ST
- The percentage female graduating with S T
education is low - This is true whether countries are developing or
developed - Where we have trend data, the percentage female
is declining in about 1/3 of the countries
30Trends in the gender gap in ST graduates,
selected countries, 1993-2003
female / male ratio ()
Source Eurostat
31Women per 100 men enrolled in university science
or engineering, India
Source Department of Education, Ministry of
Human Resource Development, India Notes After
1988 the data are provisional. 1987 to 1991
exclude post-graduates.
32- What about the gender digital divide at the
workplace? - Statistics on female access and use of ICT from
home are not necessarily reliable predictors of
ICT access and use elsewhere (i.e. the workplace) - Gender gaps in ICT access and use at work are
directly impacted by the presence of women in the
labour market - Labour force status
- Occupation
33Internet use by sex and labour force status,
Turkey, 2004
Source State Institute of Statistics (Turkey),
ICT Usage Survey on Households and Individuals
2004
34 Female Internet subscribers by occupation,
Malaysia, 2002
- Type of occupation is also a key factor
contributing to gender differences in ICT use
Source MIMOS, The 2002 Internet Subscriber Study
(JARING Internet subscribers)
35- Women account for a lower proportion of
professional, executive or managerial occupations - South Africa 15
- Canada 24
- Women are more likely to be occupied as service,
sales or craft workers
36- Women are underrepresented in ICT employment
- Australia women account for 16 of ICT workers
- India women account for 21 of IT jobs
- Japan women account for 28 of ICT employment
- United States women account for 35 of IT
workforce - Women are underrepresented in ICT occupations
- Australia women account for 22 of IT
occupations - Canada women account for 25 of IT occupations
37- Womens participation in the Information Society,
particularly in the developing countries of the
world, lags behind that of men - The gender divide cannot simply be expected to
improve with the overall digital divide - Cautious optimism on access the divide is
narrowing - Few gains and some troubling trends in ST
education and work - The country context matters significantly