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Paper : Estimating Broadband Demand and its Economic Impact in Latin America |
Focus: Access, Culture and Peace, Digital Divide
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This paper estimates the demand for broadband
technology in Latin America and quantifies the macroeconomic impact of
broadband technology on employment and productivity. While the total
number of broadband access lines is 26.8 million and has increased 38%
in the last year, the region still needs to grow the number of lines by
41% (adding 11 million lines) to
respond to the needs of the economy. If that were to be achieved, it is
estimated that the deployment could result in, at least, 378,000 new
jobs
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Estimating Broadband Demand and its Economic Impact in Latin America |
Focus: Access, Culture and Peace, Digital Divide
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A Comparative Research work on "Estimating
Broadband Demand and its Economic Impact in Latin America". The study
uses the analytical tools to compare the effect of Broadband adoption
in Latin America region and its impact on Employment generation.
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Broadband Policy in the 21st century: A Transatlantic Perspective |
Focus: Access, Culture and Peace, Digital Divide
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Broadband Policy in the 21st century: A Transatlantic Perspective on Broadband Stimulus and its Impact on the Economy.
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Impact of Broadband on Jobs and the German Economy |
Country: Germany | Focus: Access, Culture and Peace, Digital Divide
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Study on "Impact of Broadband on Jobs and the
German Economy" and Why Should Governments invest in broadband
infrastructure in the current environment?
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SusteIT: Sustainable ICT in Further and Higher Education |
Country: United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Irela | Focus: Education, Higher education
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ICT in UK further and higher education has a large environmental footprint. However, the benefits of ICT are partially offset by ‘hidden’ environmental, and, on occasion, social costs.
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IICD: ICTs for agricultural livelihoods: Impact and lessons learned from IICD supported activities |
Focus: Access, Culture and Peace, Digital Divide
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Agriculture is an important economic sector, since it provides income and food for a large segment of the population in developing countries. Intensification of production and increased market orientation are the main processes that can contribute to the future viability of the sector and income for the people that depend on it.
The projects described in this booklet were carried out by IICD and its partners over a six-year period and provide examples of the many ways in which ICTs contribute to poverty alleviation in the agriculture sector.
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IADB: Economic Development and Inclusion through local Broadband Access Networks |
Country: Latin America and the Caribbean | Focus: Access, Culture and Peace, Digital Divide
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The theme of the study is the recent experience of community-based initiatives driven by municipal governments, community organizations, local entrepreneurs associations, NGOs that have deployed sustainable local broadband connectivity services. This report provides a detailed mapping of best practice for the implementation of sustainable local broadband access networks and an analysis of the situation in Brazil, Dominican Republic, Guatemala and Peru.
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ITU: Global Cybersecurity Agenda |
Focus: Access, Culture and Peace, Digital Divide
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Launched in 2007 by ITU Secretary-General, Dr. Hamadoun I. Touré, the ITU Global Cybersecurity Agenda (GCA) is a framework for international cooperation aimed at enhancing confidence and security in the information society. The GCA is designed for cooperation and efficiency, encouraging collaboration with and between all relevant partners and building on existing initiatives to avoid duplicating efforts.
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Freedom House: Freedom on the Net: A Global Assessment of Internet and Digital Media |
Focus: Access, Culture and Peace, Digital Divide
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As internet and mobile phone use explodes worldwide, governments are adopting new and multiple means for controlling these technologies that go far beyond technical filtering. Freedom on the Net provides a comprehensive look at these emerging tactics, raising concern over trends such as the "outsourcing of censorship" to private companies, the use of surveillance and the manipulation of online conversations by undercover agents. The study covers both repressive countries such as China and Iran and democratic ones such as India and the United Kingdom, finding some degree of internet censorship and control in all 15 nations studied.
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CGAP: Poor People Using Mobile Financial Services: Observations on Customer Usage and Impact from M-PESA |
Focus: Access, Culture and Peace, Digital Divide
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M-PESA is a mobile phone-based service for sending and storing money
offered by Safaricom, Kenya’s largest mobile service provider.
Safaricom customers can register for M-PESA by visiting one of more
than 10,000 merchants who act as “agents” for account opening, handling
of deposits and withdrawals into the customer’s virtual “wallet,” and
customer support. Customers can then use an application on their mobile
phone to check their balance, send money to other people, pay bills,
and purchase mobile phone airtime. Customer funds are held in a special
trust account at the Commercial Bank of Africa.
Since its commercial launch in March 2007, M-PESA has achieved
substantial scale along several key metrics. Nearly 7 million customers
have registered with the service. An average of 150 million Ksh
(US$1.96 million) is transferred through M-PESA per day, mostly in
small amounts averaging just over 1,500 Ksh (US$20) per transaction. So
far, the system has handled over 130 billion Ksh (US$1.7 billion).
This Brief presents 10 observations on how poor people use M-PESA and how it has impacted their lives.
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ITU: Manual for measuring ICT access and use by households and individuals |
Focus: Access, Culture and Peace, Digital Divide
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The ITU Manual for Measuring ICT Access and Use by Households and Individuals has been prepared to support countries in their efforts to measure and monitor the developments towards becoming information societies. It aims at improving the availability and comparability of statistics on access to, and use of ICTs by households and individuals. Its main focus is on the core list of ICT indicators (as revised in 2008) agreed under the framework of the Partnership on Measuring ICT for Development. The Manual can be used as basic reference material when preparing, designing and implementing ICT household surveys. It also serves as the basis for ITU''s training course on ICT household statistics.
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ITU: Use of information and communication technology by the world's children and youth |
Focus: Access, Culture and Peace, Digital Divide
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While access to technology and associated electronic
content has significantly changed the lives of many
young people in wealthier economies, the same is not
generally true of those in less developed economies.
The main purpose of this report is to shed light on
the current situation by presenting and describing
statistical information on the use of information and
communication technology (ICT) by the children and
youth of the world.
A secondary goal is to describe the limitations of
existing statistics, and to present proposals to increase
the availability and comparability of statistics on
young people’s use of ICT. An important limitation,
affecting both the data and the conclusions presented
in this publication, is the small number of countries
for which relevant data are available. While the
majority of developed economies have rich datasets on
individual use of ICT , data availability is poor for most
developing and transition economies, and particularly
poor for the least developed economies (only two of
which collect any individual ICT use data).
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Crisscrossed: The participatory web: new potentials for ICT in rural areas |
Focus: Access, Culture and Peace, Digital Divide
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Web 2.0 solutions offer people in rural areas a platform for networking and knowledge exchange. This brochure provides a systematic overview of Web 2.0 experiences made to date in Africa, Asia and Latin America. It serves as a practice-oriented introduction to the theme and discusses both the potentials and the possible limits to the participatory web.
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eGovernment Authority of the Kingdom of Bahrain |
Country: Bahrain | Focus: Access, Culture and Peace, Digital Divide
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The Kingdom of Bahrains eGovernment strategy is focused on ensuring the effective delivery of government services to citizens, residents, businesses and visitors (collectively, our customers). Our target is to be the leader in eGovernment in the GCC and at least 5th best in Asia by 2010.
Our aim is to improve the lives of a nations citizens by doing much more than simply implementing technology.
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How Information Technology Can Enable 21st Century Schools |
Country: United States | Focus: Access, Culture and Peace, Digital Divide
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The United States has been focused on K-12 education reform for over two decades, with mixed results at best. One reason why progress has been slow is that the fundamental nature of pedagogy has largely been unchanged. Now in this decade, a small, but growing number of American high schools are using information technologies to redesign schools in fundamentally new ways.
In a new ITIF report, How IT Can Enable 21st Century Schools Tim McDonald and Ted Kolderie of the Education|Evolving, a Minnesota- based group of thought leaders in education reform discuss why the existing school reform movement has stalled, how information technology (including computers, software and communications) can enable the emergence of fundamentally new kinds of schools, particularly middle and high schools, and what the states and the federal government can do to drive the emergence of these new ways of educating our nation’s future generations.
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INSEAD: The Global Information Technology Report 2008-2009 |
Focus: Access, Culture and Peace, Digital Divide
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Information and communication technologies (ICT) has proven to be a key enabler of socioeconomic progress
and development, enhancing productivity and therefore economic growth, reducing poverty and improving living standards in many ways. ICT is increasingly revolutionizing production processes, access to markets, and information sources together with social interactions. ICT also has an impact on government efficiency, fostering transparency and better communication and services with and to citizens.
Among these new technologies, mobile telephony takes a special place in view of its exceptional diffusion in the last decade or so and its strong social and economic impact. In particular, mobile telephony has proven instrumental in raising prosperity and reducing poverty in developing countries, where it has boomed in recent years—thanks also to a number of facilitating factors, including an infrastructure fairly easy to deploy, a market generally open to new entrants, and the decreasing costs of mobile handsets and communication per minute, among others.
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The Cloud, the Crowd, and Public Policy, by Michael R. Nelson |
Focus: Access, Culture and Peace, Digital Divide
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A new age of more flexible, less expensive, and more secure computing will emerge soon if governments act wisely.
The Internet is entering a new phase that represents a fundamental shift in how computing is done. This phase, called Cloud computing, includes activities such as Web 2.0, Web services, the Grid, and Software as a Service, which are enabling users to tap data and software residing on the Internet rather than on a personal computer or a local server. Some leading technologists have forecast that within 5 to 10 years, 80% or even 90% of the world’s computing and data storage will occur “in the Cloud.”
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World Bank: Information and Communications for Development 2009: Extending Reach and Increasing Impact |
Focus: Connectivity, Telecom infrastructure, Wireless technologies, Access, Entrepreneurship
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Information and Communications for Development 2009: Extending Reach and Increasing Impact takes an in-depth look at how ICT, and particularly broadband and mobile, are impacting economic growth in developing countries. The data section includes at-a-glance tables for 150 economies of the latest available data on ICT sector performance. Performance measures for access, affordability and applications in government and business are also introduced.
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Sector: International Organization |
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IDRC Youtube Channel |
Focus: Knowledge Sharing
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Videos about the work in the International Development Research Centre |
Sector: Government |
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JODL: Towards a framework for the use of ICT in teacher training in Africa, by Tim Unwin |
Country: Africa | Focus: Teachers Training
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There is a gulf between the rhetoric of those advocating the use of ICT in education in Africa and the reality of classroom practice. This paper explores some of the reasons for this, and outlines a possible framework for the successful implementation of teacher training programmes that make advantageous use of appropriate ICTs. It argues that six fundamental principles of good practice must be addressed for such programmes to be effective: a shift from an emphasis on ''education for ICT'' to the use of ''ICT for education'' an integration of ICT practice within the whole curriculum a need for integration between pre-service and in-service teacher training a need for the development of relevant and locally produced content a need for appropriate educational partnerships and an emphasis on the development of sustainable costing models. The paper concludes with a framework for action to deliver the very real benefits of ICT for teacher training in Africa.
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Sector: Academia |
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K-12 Computing Blueprint |
Country: United States | Focus: Education, ICT for improving educational systems, Science, technology and innovation, Research and Development
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Twenty-first century career skills demand the use of computers to be competitive in the global economy. While nearly all U.S. schools currently use computers, the demand to one-to-one access for all students is increasing exponentially. To ensure access to technology, leaders must a vision, enlist others and successfully develop a strategic plan to accomplish educational objectives that maximize the use of technology.
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Sector: Private Sector |
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Educational Technology Debate |
Focus: Education, ICT for improving educational systems
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The Educational Technology Debate (ETD) seeks to promote a substantive discussion of how low-cost information and communication technology (ICT) device initiatives for educational systems in developing countries are relevant to the very groups they purport to serve – the students, teachers, and their surrounding communities.
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Sector: International Organization |
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ictQatar White Paper: Integrated e-Government - June 2009 |
Country: Qatar | Focus: E-government
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The Integrated E-Government Programme (i-Gov) is a government operated information and communication technology (ICT) project with the overall aim of integrating all the services provided by the various agencies of the government of Qatar into a unified system. The intention is to make all government interactions, information and transaction services, available electronically through a single access point, for all "users" (citizens, residents, visitors and businesses). The integration and standardization of all government systems, infrastructure and processes is required to achieve this goal.
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Sector: Government |
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ICT4D Collective |
Country: United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Irela | Focus: Digital Divide
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The ICT4D Collective at Royal Holloway, University of London was initiated in 2004, in 2007 it was awarded the status of a UNESCO Chair in ICT4D, and in 2009 it became an official Research Centre at the College. The Collective works in partnership to undertake research, teaching (undergraduate and postgraduate) and consultancy relating to the appropriate and sustainable use of ICT for development.
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UNESCO International Science, Technology and Innovation Centre for South-South Cooperation |
Focus: Science, technology and innovation, Science, technology and innovation, Multi-stakeholder Partnerships and Networks
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As reflected by its name, the Centre will act as an international platform for South-South cooperation in science, technology and innovation and make use of the network of the G77 plus China and the Organization of the Islamic Conference. The overall goal of the Centre is to increase in the capacity for management of science, technology and innovation throughout developing countries.
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Sector: International Organization |
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Indispensable ICT Tools for teachers |
Focus: Education, Teachers Training
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The following list of ICT tools was crowd sourced from individual educationalists and not companies when the question ''What Indispensable ICT tools do you use in education'' was asked and is not meant to be exhaustive in any way.
This particular wiki was d by Drew Buddie.
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Sector: Civil society |
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Project Design and Programming in the Area of Youth Development through ICTD, by Julia Fauth and Michael Strautmann |
Focus: Youth
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This study presents and discusses a new systematic approach to current project design and programming that centres on youth development through Information and Communication Technologies (ICT). Clearly, there is an undoubted need for challenging current approaches to this and related areas of research about media and children/young audiences: Despite a fairly impressive tradition of international meetings – focusing on children/youth and their access to media as well as their use of media – which reaches back to the beginning of the 1990s , the need for increased availability of global statistics and comparative data as reference points for research in the area has been expressed repeatedly.
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Sector: Civil society |
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The International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning |
Focus: Distance Learning
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The International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning is a refereed, open access e-journal that aims to disseminate original research, theory, and best practice in open and
distance learning worldwide. IRRODL is available free of charge to anyone with access to the Internet.
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Sector: Academia |
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UNESCO: Freedom of information: a comparative legal survey |
Focus: Freedom of Expression, Human rights, Privacy and Security
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The importance of the right to information or the right to know is an increasingly constant refrain in the mouths of development practitioners, civil society, academics, the media and governments.
What is this right, is it really a right and how have governments sought to give effect to it? These are some of the questions this book seeks to address, providing an accessible account of the law and practice regarding freedom of information, and an analysis of what is working and why.
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Sector: International Organization |
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IRRODL: Recurring Issues Encountered by Distance Educators in Developing and Emerging Nations, by Clayton R. Wright, Gajaraj Dhanarajan, Sunday A. Rej |
Focus: Education, Distance Learning
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This article explores a number of challenges faced by e-learning or distance educators in developing and emerging countries, provides a context for many of the challenges, and outlines some measures devised to overcome them. These educators must determine a sound rationale for employing online learning, recognize that technology is only part of the educational transformation process, address the lack of infrastructure and the cost of Internet bandwidth and equipment, counter the cultural imperialism of courseware from Western nations, deal with limited educational resources, place a greater emphasis on quality assurance systems and change negative perceptions of distance education, respond to the needs and concerns of both students and faculty, access or develop up-to-date educational resources, and consider the implementation of mobile learning. The continued growth and success of distance education in developing and emerging nations will depend on the extent to which issues covered in this article are addressed as they bear on the quality of the learning experience provided to students.
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Sector: Academia |
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Country: |

<All>
Afghanistan
Albania
Algeria
Andorra
Angola
Antigua and Barbuda
Arab States
Argentina
Armenia
Australia
Austria
Azerbaijan
Bahamas
Bahrain
Bangladesh
Barbados
Belarus
Belgium
Belize
Benin
Bhutan
Bolivia
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Botswana
Brazil
Brunei Darussalam
Bulgaria
Burkina Faso
Burundi
Cambodia
Cameroon
Canada
Cape Verde
Central African Republic
Chad
Chile
China
Colombia
Comoros
Congo
Costa Rica
Côte d'Ivoire
Croatia
Cuba
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Democratic People's Republic of Korea
Democratic Republic of the Congo
Denmark
Djibouti
Dominica
Dominican Republic
Ecuador
Egypt
El Salvador
Equatorial Guinea
Eritrea
Estonia
Ethiopia
Fiji
Finland
France
Gabon
Gambia
Georgia
Germany
Ghana
Gibraltar
Greece
Grenada
Guatemala
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Guyana
Haiti
Honduras
Hungary
Iceland
India
Indonesia
Iran, Islamic Republic of
Iraq
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Jamaica
Japan
Jordan
Kazakhstan
Kenya
Kiribati
Kuwait
Kyrgyzstan
Lao People's Democratic Republic
Latvia
Lebanon
Lesotho
Liberia
Libyan Arab Jamahiriya
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Madagascar
Malawi
Malaysia
Maldives
Mali
Malta
Marshall Islands
Mauritania
Mauritius
Mexico
Micronesia (Federated States of)
Moldova
Monaco
Mongolia
Montenegro
Morocco
Mozambique
Myanmar
Namibia
Nauru
Nepal
Netherlands
New Zealand
Nicaragua
Niger
Nigeria
Norway
Oman
Pakistan
Palau
Panama
Papua New Guinea
Paraguay
Peru
Philippines
Poland
Portugal
Qatar
Republic of Korea
Romania
Russian Federation
Rwanda
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Saint Lucia
Saint Vincent and The Grenadines
Samoa
San Marino
Sao Tome and Principe
Saudi Arabia
Senegal
Serbia
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
Singapore
Slovakia
Slovenia
Solomon Islands
Somalia
South Africa
Spain
Sri Lanka
Sudan
Suriname
Swaziland
Sweden
Switzerland
Syrian Arab Republic
Tajikistan
Thailand
The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
Timor-Leste
Togo
Tokelau
Tonga
Trinidad and Tobago
Tunisia
Turkey
Turkmenistan
Tuvalu
Uganda
Ukraine
United Arab Emirates
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
United Republic of Tanzania
United States
Uruguay
Uzbekistan
Vanuatu
Venezuela
Viet Nam
Yemen
Yugoslavia
Zambia
Zimbabwe
Global
Africa
Asia and the Pacific
Europe
Latin America and the Caribbean
North America
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Focus: |

لاشيء
Connectivity
. . Telecom infrastructure
. . Rural and last mile access
. . Wireless technologies
Access
. . Persons with disabilities
. . Accessibility
. . Indigenous People
. . Telecenters
. . Gender
. . Youth
. . Aging population
. . Local Content
Culture and Peace
. . ICT for Peace
. . Cultural exchange and preservation
. . Freedom of Expression
. . Human rights
Digital Divide
Education
. . ICT for improving educational systems
. . Capacity Building
. . Distance Learning
. . Adult and continuing education
. . Higher education
. . Science, technology and innovation
. . Research and Development
. . Teachers Training
Entrepreneurship
. . Enabling environment
. . Business enterprise
. . E-commerce
. . Small and medium enterprises
. . Employment
. . Microfinance
. . Science, technology and innovation
. . Poverty eradication
. . Social Entrepreneurship
Environment
. . Agriculture
. . Climate change
. . Disaster prevention and recovery
. . Energy
. . ICT waste management
. . Land resources management
. . Rural Development
. . Urban planning
. . Water
Financing for Development
. . Aid Effectiveness
. . Donor cooperation and resource mobilization
. . Donor policy
. . Financing models
. . Innovative funding mechanisms
Governance
. . Citizen's participation
. . E-government
. . Local Authorities
. . Regional authorities
. . Transparency and accountability
Health
. . Education and disease prevention
. . Electronic Health Records
. . Health Tools for Consumers
. . Health Tools for Health Professionals
. . ICT for improving health systems
. . Surveillance and Geographical Information Systems
. . Telemedicine
ICT Policy and Strategy
. . National and regional e-strategies
Intellectual Property
. . Open source software
. . Open standards
. . Patents
. . Copyrights
Internet Governance
. . ICANN
. . Interconnectivity cost
. . Multilingualism
. . Privacy and Security
. . Spam
Knowledge Sharing
. . Best practices and lessons-learned
Media
. . Broadcasting
. . New media
. . Social Interaction
Metrics and Stats
. . E-readiness
. . Indicators
. . MDG Mapping
Millennium Development Goals
Multi-stakeholder Partnerships and Networks
WSIS
. . Commission on Science and Technology for Development
. . UN General Assembly and ECOSOC
. . WSIS Action lines
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Keyword: |
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لاشيء
Government
International Organization
Private Sector
Civil society
Academia
Media
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