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The Global Alliance for Information and Communication Technologies and Development (GAID), an initiative approved by the United Nations Secretary-General in 2006, was launched after comprehensive worldwide consultations with governments, the private sector, civil society, the technical and Internet communities and academia. While the 2005 United Nations Summits emphasized the importance of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) in achieving the internationally agreed development goals, including the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), there was a need for a truly global forum that would comprehensively address cross-cutting issues related to ICT in development. Recognizing that no single actor is capable of achieving the MDGs in isolation, the creation of an open and inclusive platform that can broaden the dialogue on innovative ways of harnessing ICT for advancing development is crucial. The Global Alliance is a direct response to this need. With its multi-stakeholder approach, the Alliance reaffirms the belief that a people-centered and knowledge-based information society is essential for achieving better life for all.At its meeting in May 2008 in Kuala Lumpur, the GAID Steering Committee decided that for 2008-2010, GAID will focus on the areas of:
- Access
- Connectivity
- Content
- Education
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Modalities of work
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The work of GAID has to be organized in a fashion that respects the open and non-operational character of GAID itself (in terms of its non-involvement in funding and executing programs on the ground), yet addresses expectations of important stakeholder groups that the Alliance will trigger, in supporting the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals, significant action within the four focus areas (education, health care, entrepreneurship, governance) identified at the Kuala Lumpur meeting.
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http://unpan1.un.org/intradoc/groups/public/documents/gaid/unpan033094.pdf |
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Modalities of work The work of GAID has to be organized in a fashion that respects the open and non-operational character of GAID itself in terms of its non-involvement in funding and executing programs on the ground yet addresses expectations of important stakeholder groups that the Alliance will trigger in supporting the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals significant action within the four focus areas education health care entrepreneurship governance identified at the Kuala Lumpur meeting
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