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Open Regional Dialogue on Internet Governance (ORDIG)CountryKiribati RegionGlobal, Africa, South Pacific, South Asia Programme Summary Communication StrategiesThis programme takes place in two phases, both of which rely on ICTs and in-person exchanges to support dissemination of ideas and strategies related to internet governance. To begin, organisers convened an Asia-Pacific Internet Governance Advisory Panel (AP-IGAP), comprising 13 senior public officials responsible for ICT policy-making, scholars and researchers from the internet development community, representatives of civil society organisations, and high-level internet entrepreneurs from the private sector. The Panel is tasked to advise UNDP-APDIP on all activities related to ORDIG and carries out its work in online consultations and face-to-face meetings. Information gathering and sharing activities are meant to foster the policy-making enterprise related to internet governance. Among the activities envisioned or ongoing as part of ORDIG:
Participation on the part of those not often central to the process - young people and members of the general public - has been a key organising force in this effort. For instance, as part of ORDIG's Youth Consultation Project, graduate students specialising in information technology and development issues at the London School of Economics were invited to bring student and youth voices into the debate. A project was undertaken to consult with students from 13 Asia-Pacific countries via online discussions; the goal was to find their priority concerns and issues in information technology policy-making and internet governance. Click here for more information, and access to the final report. Furthermore, national awareness campaigns are being carried out through the press and other media at the time of the national consultations. Information will be exchanged through websites, TV, and print media. As part of these country-focused awareness campaigns, UNDP-APDIP will cooperate with relevant agencies of national governments and UNDP country offices. The aim is to get members of the public involved in internet governance issues. Development IssuesTechnology. Key PointsThe core premise of this initiative is that internet governance is neither abstract nor the exclusive domain of industrialised countries or engineers. "Internet policies, standards, rules and guidelines are established directly or indirectly, by a very wide range of institutions globally. Different institutions may have responsibility for specific functions and/or geographic regions, and exercise these responsibilities in a variety of ways, through direct authority, coordinating responsibility, or facilitation of bottom-up consensus processes." This project seeks to galvanise those most impacted by internet governance issues in the Asia-Pacific region in online, in-person, and research-based efforts to communicate varied perspectives on the nature of this governance - what it is and what it should be. Additional background may be found in an As part of Phase I of the project (which is slated to end in December 2005, followed by Phase II - to be completed sometime in 2006), ORDIG consulted over 3,000 stakeholders through sub-regional meetings, a region-wide online forum, and a region-wide, multi-lingual, issues-based online survey that looked at the internet governance priorities of the region. The result was "Voices from Asia-Pacific: Internet Governance Priorities and Recommendations", which was endorsed by delegates at the High Level Asia-Pacific Conference for the WSIS, in Tehran (May 31 - June 2 2005). Click here to learn more. PartnersORDIG receives support from the International Development Research Centre and is a collaboration effort between APDIP, UN-ESCAP, the Asia Pacific Network Information Centre, and the Diplo Foundation. ContactPhet Sayo
Programme Specialist Capacity Building Asia-Pacific Development Information Programme Tel: +603 2091-5172 Fax: +603 2093-9740 phet@apdip.net APDIP website Related SummariesSourcePosting from Sunil Abraham to the bytesforall_readers listserv on December 7 2004 (click here to access the archives); and ORDIG website; and email from Christine Apikul to The Communication Initiative on August 29 2005. Placed on the Communication Initiative site August 08 2005 Last Updated October 04 2007 |
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