Title: Primer on Inclusive eGovernance
1Primer on Inclusive e-Governance
- Strengthening local service delivery for the
MDGs
Community of Practice Meeting on e-Governance
Access to Information 14 16 January
2009 Hyderabad
Lars Bestle Regional Policy Specialist, Access
to Information, e-Governance and Media
Development UNDP Regional Centre in Bangkok,
Thailand
2Content
- MDG progress
- Challenges in local service delivery
- Rethinking service delivery
- E-Governance an essential pillar in reforming
local service delivery - E-government programs are rarely inclusive or
pro-poor - Typology of inclusive e-Governance Applications
- Nine building blocks of pro-poor e-governance
3MDG progress in Asia Pacific
Country groups on and off track for achieving the
MDGs
Source ADB, ESCAP and UNDP MDG progress report
2007
4Challenges in basic service delivery for MDG
progress
- Rural poor have limited access to social services
and economic opportunities - Lack of efficient local service delivery
- Lack of budgets for services in rural and remote
areas - Lack of information about entitlements to and
availability of services - Lack of accountability and transparency in
service delivery - Lack of information and effective communication
channels
5The long route of accountability
Policy makers
Rural Communities
Basic service providers
6Rethinking Service Delivery
- Make services more available
- Raise quality of service
- Broaden the range of service providers
- Make services user driven
- Empower the users of services
- Create better and appropriate access to
information for rural populations - Make e-governance a mechanism of inclusive
pro-poor service delivery
7e-Government programs are usually not pro-poor
- Focused on internal efficiency rather than
service delivery - If service delivery they are confined to licenses
and tax collection - Mostly urban focused
- Pilots with demonstrated impact on poverty
reduction are rarely replicated - The poor or MDG targets are rarely specifically
targeted - Lack understanding of the demand for ICTs in
rural areas - Needs of vulnerable groups different in terms of
access points for service, content, and the
nature of interface.
8An example Bhoomi kiosks in India
- Farmer friendly mechanism to accessing and
updating land records with ICT - Basis for ownership
- Basis for access to loans.
9Potential e-Governance services for the MDGs
- Public grievances mechanisms
- electricity, water, sanitation
- Rural e-services
- land records
- Social services
- birth and death certificates, school registration
- Public information
- employment opportunities, hospital services,
public transportation info - Public feedback mechanisms
- Employment and welfare services
- Agricultural information
- weather, pesticides, crop diseases, market prices
- Health information
- Utility payments
- electricity, water, telephone, etc
10Identifying pro-poor e-governance applications
11Targeted benefits for the poor
12Nine Building Blocks of Inclusive e-Governance
Embed e-governance programmes with local
governance and poverty reduction programmes
Identify needs, problems and opportunities of
communities carefully
Identify high impact e-governance applications to
improve local service delivery
Ensure a pro-poor focus in e-governance and
e-government policy- and strategy-making
Analyse the needs for systems and process
re-engineering of integrated service delivery
Goal Inclusive local service delivery through
e-governance
Develop a system of monitoring, evaluation and
sustainable replication of pro-poor e-governance
Identify the appropriate mix of technologies
Build capacity and promote participation of
stakeholders in designing, implementing and
utilizing pro-poor e-governance services
Build public-private-civil society partnerships
in the delivery of ICT-based local services
13Thank You