November 2002
The Information Society in Asia and the Question of Cultural Diversity
Dr. Susanne Ornager, UNESCO Adviser for Communication and Information in Asia & Pacific
Background
Information Society Electronic networks and multimedia
technologies Comprehensive and interdisciplinary new
approach Different thinking Rapid advancement in access to technology etc. New breed greatly required
WSIS: Main focus
The WSIS is concerned with the impact the information of the global information society is having on every aspect of life. The intention is to produce an international action plan for achieving the goals of the information society
WSIS: Organizational Structures
High patronage: UN Secretary General
Lead Role: ITU
High level organizing Committee (HLSOC)
• Heads of UN Agencies
Executive Secretariat (ES)
• Staff from Governments, UN agencies, Private Sector, Civil
Society/NGOs; includes a Civil Society Division
WSIS : Basic objectives
Harness the potential of knowledge and technology for promoting the international development goals
Ensure a smooth coordination of the practical establishment of the information society around the globe
Create a unique opportunity for all key players to assemble at a high-level gathering and to develop a better understanding of the Information Society and its impact on the international community
WSIS: Dates
First Phase:
Geneva 2003
• To address the broad
range of themes
• To adopt a
Declaration of
Principles and an
Action Plan
Second Phase:
Tunis, 2005
• To focus on
development
themes
• To assess progress
made
• To review the
Action Plan
WSIS: Six proposed themes
Building infrastructure
• The role of telecommunications, investment and technology in creating the Information Society infrastructure and bridging the digital divide
Opening the gates
• Achieving universal and equitable access to the Information Society
• Meeting the needs of the developing world
• Information as a common public good
WSIS: Six proposed themes (continued)
Services and applications
• The implications of the Information Society for economic, social and cultural development
• The implication of the Information Society for sciences
The needs of users
• Consumer protection,• Relevant content, reflecting
cultural diversity and the right to communicate
• Ethics of the Information Society
• User training and Worker protection and workplace privacy
WSIS: Six proposed themes (end)
Developing a framework • The roles of government, the
private sector and civil society in shaping the Information Society
• Information: a common public good (public domain information)
• Intellectual property rights and legal exceptions
• Freedom of expression • Telecommunication and Internet
access tariff policies
ICT*and Education
• ICT as a lever for educational change
• The learning environment : ICT, teachers, learners and content
• The needs of currently employed workers #
WSIS: ICT
* Information and Communication Technology (ICT)
WSIS: Outcome
1. Declaration embodying a set of principles and rules of conduct aimed at establishing a more inclusive and equitable Information Society; and
2. Plan of Action formulating operational proposals and concrete measures to be taken so that all benefit more equitably from the opportunities presented by the Information Society.
WSIS: Preparation Calendar
PrepCom 2 (January (13-17) 2003, Japan)
• Examine draft documents to be presented at the Summit
PrepCom 3 (Second half 2003)
• Conduct final negotiations concerning the Declaration of
Principles and Plan of Action
WSIS : UNESCO
The Director General of UNESCO, Mr Koïchiro Matsuura, emphasized four point of interest to the organisation:
To find agreement on common principles for the construction of knowledge societies;
To promote the use of ICTs for capacity-building, empowerment, governance and social participation;
To strengthen capacities for creation and exchanges and scientific research and communication;
To enhance learning opportunities through access to diversified contents and delivery systems.
WSIS : UNESCO
What kind of knowledge societies should we build?
Questions of equitable access, social inclusion, cultural diversity and human rights require us to consider not only the kinds of societies we want to create but also the relationships between different societies.
WSIS : UNESCO
The question raised helps to draw the attention away from the instrumental dimension of ICTs and towards the crucial matter of appropriate content.
What types of knowledge constitute “knowledge societies” and
How can we best harness ICTs in order to advance education, science and culture in inclusive and equitable ways.
WSIS : UNESCO
Four key principles deserve particular consideration with the Summit preparatory process:
Equal access to education Guarantee of a strong public domain of information Preservation and promotion of cultural diversity,
including multilingualism Freedom of expression
WSIS : UNESCO
UNESCO’s primary concern is that we build knowledge societies that are grounded upon respect for human rights and are genuinely open and inclusive.
Education has to be linked to the generation or production of knowledge, the ways in which information and knowledge are shared, and the uses to which ICTs are put.
It requires the encouragement of community-based approaches and local action.
Arabic0.9%
Russian1.9%
Scandinavian2.2%
French3.4%
Portuguese2.5%
Italian3.6%
Korean4.8%
Spanish4.6%
Other5.9% German
6.3% Chinese8.5%
Japanese9.9%
English45.5%
Languages on the Net- 2001 Total: 476 million net users -
English29.0%
Chinese20.2%
Other10.8%
Spanish7.6%
Japanese7.3%
Korean4.4%
German5.8%
Portuguese4.0%
Italian2.9%
French3.8%
Russian1.9%
Scandinavian1.5% Arabic
0.8%
Languages on the Net- 2003 Total: 793 million net users -
WSIS: Multilingualism
Supporters of the dominance of one language on the Internet predicts that:• English or Chinese will become the native language of a
majority of the world sometimes in the 21 century
The dominance of English or Chinese doesn't really affect the future of the other languages of the world, since there are strong forces militating for the use of local languages on the Web
WSIS: Multilingualism
Solution can be:
Worldwide effort by governments and international organisations to address the issue of multilingualism through adoption of action plans and policies, which would promote local languages on the Internet
WSIS: Cultural Diversity
Restricting the debate about cyberspace to a discussion of technical questions cannot serve the interests of the vast majority of the world’s citizenry to whom the internet holds the promise of more freedom, empowerment and development.
Will the Internet eventually create a single world such that differences and diversities among cultures will disappear?
WSIS: Cultural Diversity
A positive observation is to view the global and the local diversities as flexible implying that there is a constant action to decide what should be allowed in and what should be kept out
Further the globalization processes may lead to the creation of multiple popular and local cultures
The globalizing force does not create a single, monolithic cultural entity
It will change the local cultures, but the global and the local are always negotiated
WSIS : UNESCO
UNESCO considers multilingualism as a search for democratic public policy responses to cultural and ethnic diversity
UNESCO's Constitution stresses the "fruitful diversity of cultures", its highest principle is "the intellectual and moral solidarity of mankind“
WSIS : UNESCO
Increasingly, development planners are realising that language is an essential component and without the ability to communicate what their real needs are, people risk having solutions imposed on them and being denied access to information that can assist them to take their own decisions
WSIS : UNESCO
UNESCO distinguishes two main schools of thought on the Internet and language. The first views the Internet as representing a democratising force which will promote diversity and assist the development of other languages. Hence the second view sees it as reinforcing traditional patterns of inequality and furthering the interests of the North at the expense of developing countries.
UNESCO promotes language diversity on the Internet by employing the thoughts of the first school
WSIS: Concluding observations
Lewi Strauss said nearly 50 years ago:
“The necesity of preserving the diversity of cultures in a world which is threatened by monotony and uniformity has surely not remained unnoticed by international institutions (...)”
Although the society has changed there is still the use for diminishing the cultural and linguistic divide
Thank You