This summary is part of a research project carried out between March and October 2006 in support of the International Institute for Communication and Development (IICD), one of The Communication Initiative (The CI)'s partners.
Based in Kenya, the East African office of Abantu for Development, an international non-governmental organisation (NGO), currently administrates four programmes focussing on training and providing information and advice on mobilising resources towards sustainable development in Africa. This specific project comes under the Gender and ICT (information and communication technology) programming area of Abantu’s work.
According to this case study, the project was initiated in 1999 based on the documented needs of women’s groups and sentiments raised at existing ICT training workshops. It began with a number of training workshops for women’s groups on ICT, awareness-raising seminars for policy makers, and the development of a website. Currently, the project has four programming areas: Training and Capacity Building (TCB), Advocacy Public Awareness and Networking (APAN), Research, Publications and Information (RPI), and the Institutional Development of Abantu.
The primary objectives of the project are to improve African women’s use of and access to the internet, as well as to influence policy makers in order to ensure the inclusion of gender perspectives in the ICT policy making process.
Through the training workshops and seminars, the project developed a strong and focused core group of women across Africa that has helped to accomplish the project objectives. Under the TCB component of the project, four communities from various regions in Kenya were trained on internet and software programme use. Under the PRI component, gender-sensitive guides were produced for use by African women’s organisations. Under the APAN arm of the project, a number of public seminars have been held that have helped to voice African women’s perspectives on ICT legislation and policy development. And, through this project, Abantu has come to realise that ICT is integral for the efficiency and effectiveness of their three other programming areas: Poverty and Gender, Governance and Gender, and Conflict and Gender.