Title: The Golden Book, WSIS Stocktaking, ICT Success Stories
1The Golden Book, WSIS Stocktaking, ICT
Success Stories
- International Telecommunication Union
Moderators/Facilitators Consultation Meeting
UNOG, Geneva, 24 February 2006
Presentation prepared for the official launch of
the Golden Book.For more information, please
send an e-mail to wsis-stocktaking_at_itu.int
2The Golden Book Origins
- Swiss proposal during PrepCom-2 for a
stakeholder commitments paper, later endorsed
by Intergovernmental Bureau of PrepCom. - Questionnaire launched in October 2005
- Creation of the Golden Book database
- Invitation to all WSIS Stakeholders to submit
commitments and new initiatives announced during
the Tunis Phase of WSIS
3The Golden Book Origins
- Database open for entries from 20 October to 31
January 2006 - By 1 February, 378 commitments registered
- 24 February 2006 official launch
- The Golden Book Report
- The Golden Book CD Rom
4378 Commitments
Breakdown of activities by entity
Scope of activities
5378 Commitments
Breakdown by type of activity
6378 Commitments
Timescale of activities
Breakdown by origin
7378 commitments
gt
3.2 billion
Amount of financial commitments by stakeholder
8378 commitments
gt
3.2 billion
Breakdown by anticipated expenditure
378 commitments
9378 commitments
gt
3.2 billion
Scale of financial commitments by different
stakeholders
10Selected large commitments Governments
- China 'Cun Cun Tong' Project
- Villages Connected The overall goal of this
project is the realization of universal access to
telephone service in the nearly 70,000 villages
having no telephone coverage. - Egypt The Million Book Project
- Bibliotheca Alexandrina (BA) and its partners are
working together to demonstrate the projects
feasibility by digitizing one million books
within three years and publishing them as a
searchable collection on the internet. All
project partners are providing content to ensure
that the collection is extensive, diverse and
multilingual. - Pan African E-Network Project
- The network should connect all 53 countries of
the African Union to provide effective
communication and connectivity among these
countries.
11Selected commitmentsIntl and regional
organisations
- European Union GEANT2
- The European Union supports a broader policy to
ensure the global reach of research and education
networks. It includes also the launching of
concrete initiatives to support developing
regions in the world, in particular the
Mediterranean rim, Latin America and Asia via the
projects EUMEDconnect, ALICE and TEIN2,
respectively. - ITU Connect the World
- Multi-stakeholder partnership launched in 2005 to
work towards connecting the estimated 800000
villages worldwide still without ICTs. - World Bank Africa Regional Initiative
- Regional Communications Infrastructure Program in
East and Southern Africa is an investment and
Technical Assistance (TA) project in support of
the liberalization of telecommunication markets
in Eastern and Southern African countries and the
development of a modern fiber-optic backbone to
connect these countries to each other and the
rest of the world.
12Selected commitments Business Sector Entities
- INTEL Corporation Intel Teach to the Future
- Intel Corporation will train an additional 10
million teachers in developing nations over the
next five years in the use of technology to
enhance learning. Intel also will donate 100,000
PCs to classrooms in developing nations in order
to improve learning skills. - Microsoft Telecentre.org
- Canadas IDRC, Microsoft Corp and the Swiss SDC
announced the launch of telecentre.org, a
collaborative initiative that will strengthen the
capacity of tens of thousands of community-based
telecentres around the world. - Sentech Digital Terrestrial Television
Broadcasting in South Africa - Digitisation of the Television Broadcasting
infrastructure will enable systems to seamlessly
carry broadcasting, data and voice content
efficiently. Digital television broadcasting and,
more specifically, digital terrestrial
broadcasting, opens up many possibilities for
providing universal access on a very broad
basis.
13Selected commitments Civil Society Entities
- Village Phone Replication ManualGrameen
Foundation USA - GFUSA is working to spread the successful Village
Phone model throughout the developing world with
the release of its Village Phone Replication
Manual. The manual, which draws from the
experiences of Village Phone in both Bangladesh
and Uganda, provides a blueprint for bringing
affordable, accessible telecommunications service
to poor, rural areas through microfinance. - New Arabic Development Portal Development
Gateway Foundation - Bibliotheca Alexandrina (BA) and the Development
Gateway Foundation will unveil plans for a new
Arabic language web portal on development. The
portal aims to address the existing shortage of
development information for the Arab World. - 'One Dollar for Development' FORMIT Foundation
- The ODFD initiative aims at making available at
no cost e-Government applications owned by
developed countries to developing countries by
encouraging North-South and South-South
cooperation as an effective contribution to
development and as a means to share and transfer
good practices and technologies.
14WSIS Stocktaking
- Ongoing process
- Collaborative database
- Online questionnaire
- More than 2600 projects registered
- Basis for future evaluation
- Report on Stocktaking published at Tunis Summit
15WSIS Stocktaking Future
- Tunis Agenda, paragraph 120
- The sharing of information related to the
implementation of WSIS outcomes is an important
element of evaluation. We note with appreciation
the report on the Stocktaking of WSIS-related
activities, which will serve as one of the
valuable tools for assisting with the follow-up,
beyond the conclusion of the Tunis Phase of the
Summit, as well as the Golden Book of
initiatives launched during the Tunis phase.
We encourage all WSIS stakeholders to continue to
contribute information on their activities to the
public WSIS stocktaking database, maintained by
ITU. In this regard, we invite all countries to
gather information at the national level with the
involvement of all stakeholders, to contribute to
the stocktaking.
16WSIS Stocktaking Future
- Tracking progress made in building the
Information Society - Maintaining and improving the Internet-based
Stocktaking Database - Encouraging all WSIS stakeholders to submit and
update descriptions of projects - Establishing the necessary links to
moderators/facilitators to share and exchange
information efficiently
17WSIS Stocktaking Future
- Raising awareness of the content of the database
among all WSIS stakeholders through greater
information and publicity - Developing analytical tools and materials
emphasizing countries experiences and best
practices - Publication of future editions of the Stocktaking
Report to present the efforts of all stakeholders
in WSIS implementation
18ICT Success Stories
Official LaunchMarch 2006
- Interactive portal highlighting best practices
in the ICT sector - Requested in the Plan of Action (para 28e)
- Web Portal components
- - Database with more then 600 success stories
- - Resources on ICT for development
- Criteria for project selection
- - Focus on developing countries,
multi-stakeholder partnerships, successful
outcome, innovative approach, cross-sectoral-secto
r, targeting vulnerable groups, etc
www.itu.int/ict_stories
19Thank you very much for Your attention!
- wsis-stocktaking_at_itu.int