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Our
side of the divide - African Perspectives on Information and Communication
Technologies
Media Institute of Southern Africa (MISA)
2003
http://www.misa.org/broadcasting/resource-wsis/Our
Side of the Divide-ENG.pdf
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Introduction
This
booklet is part of a broad strategy called ‘Speaking for Ourselves’.
It recognises, that while the African perspective on the digital
divide is underrepresented in the context of the World Summit on
the Information Society, the people most directly affected by the
digital divide have the best ideas, analysis and opinions about
how to address the issues.
Numerous barriers
to Africa’s participation in the information society confront us.
Paramount among them are poverty, illiteracy, limited access to
communications infrastructure and a serious and debilitating lack
of bandwidth. All this in the context of an increasingly globalised
world that is propagating policies of free markets that hold some
benefits but which also favour the world’s stronger economies and
have some fall out which directly increases the digital divide.
In Africa the
World Wide Web is called the World Wide Wait; after 3pm when North
America, home to the largest on-line community, becomes active,
there is an even greater slow down. The cost of using a dial up
connection results in extremely high access costs, which are out
of reach for most African people. So access to electronic information
is difficult and this is a tragic limitation because while it is
possible to have information without development, it isn’t possible
to have development without information. If information is power,
then access is empowerment.
The African
continent has produced some innovative applications of ICT’s and
is taking great strides in interpreting the information society
as a people centred, community based sphere. The cell phone and
text message have changed the dynamic of elections, voice over IP,
where it is available, is enabling family reunification and providing
a reason for many people to make their first phone call to distant
relatives.
African people
are among the best communicators on the planet but for ICTs to be
used, they have to have relevance. Technology itself cannot create
change. The use and availability of technology is dependent upon
both the historical moment and the prevailing social, economic,
and cultural structure into which it is introduced. The legacies
inherited in the process of unequal global development make it imperative
that the laying of an information super highway in Africa must be
supported with an appropriate framework to accommodate pedestrians
and donkey carts too.
We hope that
the perspectives in these pages deepen understanding about the opportunities
and limitations to Africa’s imminent leap into the information society.
Tracey Naughton
Regional Broadcast Programme Manager
Media Institute of Southern Africa
Enquiries about this booklet can be sent to: info@broadcastingcharter.org
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