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WSIS: Wiring women won't close the gap
Marty Logan,
IPS
November 18, 2005
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=31084
TUNIS - "People
say, 'what are you talking about: it's just a computer, it's just
a telephone -- how can there be gender issues over technology?'
There's still no understanding of how things like computers get
into institutions and are incorporated into existing male-dominated
power structures," says an Indian woman delegate here for a
global meeting on making the so-called Information Age benefit all
people.
What is crystal clear
is that the 'digital divide' includes a wide gulf between how men
and women participate in this new age. And that correcting the imbalance
will not be as easy as installing more Internet lines or boosting
the number of mobile phones.
'Digital divide' has
become ubiquitous in describing gaps between how the world's people
own and use the Internet and other information and communications
technologies (ICTs). Usually the term refers to the gap between
rich and poor countries, but it can also mean fissures within countries,
or between the sexes.
According to a set of
principles issued after the first part of this global conference
-- the World Summit on the Information Society -- in 2003, governments
are working to make men and women equal players in the Info Age.
"We are committed
to ensuring that the information society enables women's empowerment
and their full participation on the basis of equality in all spheres
of society and in all decision-making processes. To this end, we
should mainstream a gender equality perspective and use ICTs as
a tool to that end," they declared.
But the message was lost
from the moment that only one woman appeared among a roster of men
for the opening ceremony of WSIS part two here in the Tunisian capital,
says activist Magaly Pazello. "The gender dimension has kind
of been put on the backburner in the negotiations and documents
of the summit. There is no explicit commitment that guarantees the
rights of women," Pazello from the Development Alternatives
with Women for a New Era (DAWN) told the main session of this gigantic
gathering Thursday.
Women, she added on behalf
of civil society's gender caucus, "would like to participate
at all levels of decision-making, including in the development of
infrastructure, financing and the choice of technologies. We'd also
like to participate in a debate on the ethics of technology itself
and its application."
Debates are needed because
the issues are complex, emphasises a report released here Thursday.
"Even in countries where access is no longer much of an issue
and (the use of ICTs) is high, inequalities in actual use can hamper
women's development opportunities," says 'Women in the Information
Society' a chapter in a report 'From the Digital Divide to Digital
Opportunities'.
"We can say little
about women's equal and active participation in the information
society just based on access. Access is a necessary but not sufficient
condition to closing the gender digital divide," adds the report,
published by United Nations agencies and various partners, including
Canada's International Development Research Centre (IDRC).
No doubt ICTs are important,
"enabling women to overcome isolation and move towards increased
opportunities", but there is little statistical data to back
up that qualitative evidence, adds the chapter.
Women are also slow to
start using new technologies, it says. "This gender divide
persists as we move to countries with more developed 'info states'."
For example, in Taiwan in 2004, 93 women used the Internet for every
100 men but only 70 women accessed the Internet via mobile phones
for every 100 men.
"While the gender
gap has recently vanished in a few countries with high Internet
penetration, such as Canada and the United States, this is not the
case among other countries well known for their info states, such
as Norway, Luxembourg and the UK," says the document.
"At the same time
we also see a number of countries with very low overall penetration
that do not seem to experience a gender divide", including
Mongolia, the Philippines and Thailand, where more women than men
use the Internet, it adds.
"Much remains to
be done in order to understand better why gender gaps exist and
why they matter," the report says.
In a stuffy meeting room
here so small that participants, including the translator, were
forced to sit on the floor, a group of women concluded this week
that ICTs have far to travel to live up to their potential.
For instance, the Internet
has led to more sexual harassment and exploitation and "enables
men to buy sex and exchange millions of images of women and children,"
said Mavic Cabrera-Balleza from ISIS International Manila, a women's
communication group for the Asia-Pacific region.
Four years ago, 10 percent
of sales made on the Internet were sex-related, she added.
Janice Brodman, director
of the Centre for Innovative Technologies in the U.S.-based Education
Development Centre says "ICTs have in fact continually eroded
human rights for women and will continue to do so in the future
if we don't take steps now."
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