United Nations Information and Communication Technologies Task Force
The United Nations Information and Communication Technologies Task Force was a multi-stakeholder initiative associated with the United Nations which is "intended to lend a truly global dimension to the multitude of efforts to bridge the global digital divide, foster digital opportunity and thus firmly put ICT at the service of development for all".
Establishment
The UN ICT Task Force was created by United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan in November 2001, acting upon a request by the United Nations Economic and Social Council dated July 11, 2000, with an initial term of mandate of three years. It followed in the footsteps of the World Economic Forum Global Digital Divide Initiative, and the Digital Opportunities Task Force, established in 2000 by the G8 at their annual summit in Okinawa, Japan. By providing it with a home in the United Nations, this accorded the UN ICT Task Force, in the eyes of many developing countries, a broader legitimization than the previous WEF and G8 initiatives, even if these previous initiatives also included a multi-stakehoder approach with broad participation by stakeholders from industrialized and developing countries.Aims and objectives
The Task Force's principal aim was to provide policy advice to governments and international organizations for bridging the digital divide. In addition to supporting the World Summit on the Information Society and leading the UN in developing ICT strategies for development, the Task Force's objective was to form partnerships between the UN system and states, private industry, trusts, foundations and donors, and other stakeholders.Membership and organization
The UN ICT Task Force has included the top ranks of the computer industry, together with global NGOs, governments and international agencies. Its coordinating body was a multi-stakeholder bureau, assisted by a small secretariat at UN headquarters in New York. Technical advice was provided by a high-level panel of technical advisors.Activities
United Nations Information Technology Service (UNITeS)
Within the suggesting a UN ICT Task Force, the panel welcomed the establishment of a United Nations Information Technology Service, suggested by Kofi Annan in "". The panel made suggestions on its configuration and implementation strategy, including that ICT4D volunteering opportunities make mobilizing "national human resources" within developing countries a priority, for both men and women. The initiative was launched at the United Nations Volunteers under the leadership of Sharon Capeling-Alakija and was active from February 2001 to February 2005. Initiative staff and volunteers participated in the World Summit on the Information Society in Geneva in December 2003.Challenge to Silicon Valley
In November 2002 Kofi Annan issued a Challenge to Silicon Valley to create suitable systems at prices low enough to permit deployment everywhere. The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees ran a refugee camp in Tanzania where the Global Catalyst Foundation had placed computers and communications equipment for the use of the Burundian refugees confined there. The International Telecommunication Union worked with the Kingdom of Bhutan on a Simputer project.World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS)
The Task Force was active, inter alia, in the process leading to the World Summit on the Information Society in Geneva in December 2003 and WSIS II in Tunis, Tunisia, in November 2005. In order to participate in the second phase of the WSIS, the Task Force's original three-year mandate was extended by another year and expired on 31 December 2005, with no further extension.Working groups
The Task Force's stakeholders, members and the experts on the panel of technical advisors, were active in working groups organized around four broad themes:- ICT policy and governance
- Enabling environment
- Human resource development and capacity building
- ICT Indicators and MDG mapping
Regional networks
Meetings
2002, June 17–18: A session of the General Assembly of the United Nations was devoted to information and communication technologies for development, addressing the digital divide in the context of globalization and the development process. The session promoted coherence and synergies between various regional and international information and communication technologies initiatives. The meeting also contributed to the preparation of WSIS. Many countries were represented by high-level officials responsible for communications and for development.The Task Force held 10 semi-annual meetings in various places that served as important venues for exchange of best practices, and to bring the various stakeholders together to work on common themes. Most successful, in the eyes of the participants, were those meetings that were held in conjunction with a series of Global Forums:
- 1st meeting: at UN headquarters in New York City, NY, - November 19–20, 2001.
- 2nd meeting: at UN headquarters in New York City, NY, - February 3–4, 2002.
- 3rd meeting: at UN headquarters in New York City, NY, - September 30 - October 1, 2002, focused on ICT for development in Africa. It also reviewed the results of the first year of Task Force activities and agreed on an ambitious strategy for the next two years.
- 4th meeting: at UN in Geneva, - February 21–22, 2004, with a Private Sector Forum.
- 5th meeting: at WIPO in Geneva - September 12–13, 2003, to allow participants to discuss the Task Force's contribution to WSIS.
- 6th meeting: at UN headquarters in New York City, NY, - March 2004, with a Global Forum on Internet Governance.
- 7th meeting: at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Berlin, Germany - November 18–20, 2004, with a Global Forum on an Enabling Environment.
- 8th meeting: in Dublin, Ireland - April 13–15, 2005, with a Global Forum on Harnessing the Potential of ICTs in Education.
- 9th meeting: at ILO in Geneva, Switzerland - October 1, 2005.
- 10th meeting: at the World Summit on the Information Society in Tunis, Tunisia - November 17, 2005.
WSIS II in Tunis
Parallel to the booth at the ICT4ALL exhibition, a series of events was held under the auspices of the UN ICT Task Force and its members:Measuring the Information Society
The Partnership for Measuring ICT for Development involves 11 organizations—Eurostat, the International Telecommunication Union, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, the United Nations ICT Task Force, the five United Nations Regional Commissions and the World Bank.Role of Parliaments in the Information Society
Key parliament leaders presented their views on the role that national and regional assemblies can play in building the information society at a “High-level Dialogue on Governance, Global Citizenship and Technology”, on 16 November.Choosing the Right Technologies for Education
At this workshop, the Global e-School Initiative presented the Total Cost of Ownership Calculator—a framework for identifying and selecting the right ICT for schools by assessing their benefits, feasibility and costs.Building Partnerships for the Information Society
Two high-level round tables on 16 November focused on “Regional Perspectives for the Global Information Society” and on “Women in the Information Society: Building a Gender Balanced Knowledge-based Economy”.Putting ICT to Work for the Millennium Development Goals and the UN Development Agenda
The 17 November round table examined how ICT can be applied to the achievement of the internationally agreed development goals, and discussed ways to raise awareness of ICT as an enabler of development.Achieving Better Quality and Cost Efficiency in Health Care and Education through ICT
The 17 November panel demonstrated the potential of ICT to improve quality and cost efficiency of key public services, with specific focus on education and health care.Bridging the Digital Divide with Broadband Wireless Internet
The 17 November round table focused on the critical role that broadband wireless infrastructure deployments play in bridging the digital divide.Outcomes from WSIS
GESCI
One of the notable outcomes of the work of the UN ICT Task Force was the creation in 2003 of the Global E-Schools and Communities Initiative, an international NGO initially located in Dublin, Ireland, to improve education in schools and communities through the use of information and communication technologies. GESCI was officially launched during the WSIS.Today GESCI is located in Nairobi, Kenya. It has evolved into an organization engaging with governments and ministries, development partners, the private sector and communities to provide strategic advice, coordinate policy dialogue, conduct research and develop and implement models of good practice for the widespread use and integration of ICTs in formal education and other learning environments, within the context of supporting the development of inclusive knowledge societies and the achievement of the SDGs.
ePol-Net
Another outcome is the Global ePolicy Resource Network, designed to marshal global efforts in support of national e-strategies for development. The network provides ICT policymakers in developing countries with the depth and quality of information needed to develop effective national e-policies and e-strategies. The network was first proposed by the members of the Digital Opportunities Task Force, who merged their activities with the UN ICT Task Force in 2002. The ePol-Net was also officially launched during the WSIS.Global Centre for ICT in Parliament
Another outcome of the WSIS is the Global Centre for ICT in Parliament. Launched by the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs in cooperation with the Inter-parliamentary Union on the occasion of the World Summit of the Information Society in Tunis in November 2005, the Global Centre for Information and Communication Technologies in Parliament responds to the common desire to build a people-centred, inclusive and development-oriented information society, where legislatures are empowered to better fulfill their constitutional functions through Information and Communication Technologies.The Global Centre for ICT in Parliament acts as a clearing house for information, research, innovation, technology and technical assistance, and promotes a structured dialogue among parliaments, centres of excellence, international organizations, the civil society, the private sector and the donor community, with the purpose to enhance the sharing of experiences, the identification of best practices and the implementation of appropriate solutions.
Follow-up
The task of bridging the digital divide is yet unfinished. The WSIS has called for an Internet Governance Forum to allow for a global multi-stakeholder discussion of issues related to the governance of the global resource that the Internet represents. The WSIS also called for a follow-up and implementation process, for which the principles embodied in the multi-stakeholder composition and workings of the UN ICT TF can provide a useful model.Work is also being carried on by the UN Group on the Information Society, with a focus on the UN System, and the successor to the UN ICT TF, the Global Alliance for ICT and Development, with an international development emphasis.
Selected documents
- , suggesting a UN ICT Task Force.
- , asking for the establishment of the UN ICT TF.
Publication series
- UN ICT Task Force Series 1 - - July 2005,
- UN ICT Task Force Series 2 - - July 2005,
- UN ICT Task Force Series 3: - July 2005,
- UN ICT Task Force Series 4: - July 2005,
- UN ICT Task Force Series 5 - - July 2005,
- UN ICT Task Force Series 6 - - September 2005,
- UN ICT Task Force Series 7 -
- UN ICT Task Force Series 8:
- UN ICT Task Force Series 9:
- UN ICT Task Force Series 10: - September 2005,
- UN ICT Task Force Series 11:
- UN ICT Task Force Series 12: