IETF WAS Re: [governance] Enhanced Cooperation (was Re: reality check on economics)
Anriette Esterhuysen
anriette at apc.org
Wed May 30 04:38:40 EDT 2012
Hi all.. just jumping in on this to respond to McTim and Mike's
discussion about ICT business and CS in Africa.
I completely agree with McTim on Africa (where I am from and live) being
full of ICT entrepreneurs and innovators; technical people and business
people who are not into just getting rich, but developing enterprises
that will benefit their communities. Don't usually don't call themselves
'social entrepreneurs'. They are just responding to local needs and
creating opportunities.
These people have been much more effective in supporting ICT's for
development than most governmental initiatives.
This does not mean I believe we should not pressure/encourage
governments to commit and implement... we should.. but often (not
always) governments provide the worst of both worlds:
- poorly planned ICT related social and eco. programmes
- restrictive regulation that limits bottom up innovation and
community-based initiatives.
This sector is not without its own challenges.. e.g. in South Africa
most young tech innovators are white. But as a group they constitute a
really positive force.. e.g. when it comes to open source and free software.
FOSSFA (well represented on this list) is itself an amazing force and
pool of African techie expertise.
Our challenge is getting these people involved in the IGF, ICANN, IETF
etc. When I talk to them about this their eyes usually glaze over. They
are so used to policy/governments not delivering for them that they
don't see the point. They do however get involved in national
internet/ICT policy discussions quite often.
And the techies also lack the resources to travel to meetings. Yes, IETF
does not need you to be physically present.. but face-to-face networking
at universities, conferences and so on is still in many cases how 'first
contact' takes place.
As for CS. Agree with McTim there too. Lots of local initiatives. But
they don't really see the point of/or have the resources to get into
global networks.
Or, they are very issue specific.. e.g. working on telecentres,
libraries, public access. info literacy and so on.
I also find that when such people do make it to the global space the
conversations are just not that relevant to them, and the talkers are
not that interested in what the people from developing countries have to
say. Experiences and issues are just so different - or are expressed in
such different ways.
Never underestimate the effect of the world being skewed. Usually it is
those of us from developing countries who have to make the effort to get
into, and stay in, global spaces. We have to do the longer distance
traveling (usually). We have to apply for the visas, and deal with
horrid exchange rates that make affording being in Europe/NA difficult.
And, to apply for a visa you need an invitation from some entity that
will be willing to swear you are not an economic migrant.
I know that there are special opportunities for supporting and including
ICT people from developing countries. This often favours people like
myself who get invited as a women, from a developing country to fill
quotas on panels. But the barriers to participate are still far greater
for people from the developing world.
If IG institutions really want to change this I think they should do
what some international NGOs have done, like Civicus, APC, and
ActionAid: move your internatioinal base to a developing country, or if
that is not practical, have most of your international meetings in
developing countries.
Anriette
Anriette
On 29/05/2012 19:31, McTim wrote:
> On 5/29/12, michael gurstein <gurstein at gmail.com> wrote:
>> McTim,
>>
>> The problem is that for many "poor countries (LDC's)" there is no "private
>> sector" in this area and for the most part no civil society with the
>> expertise or the financial resources to participate in these discussions or
>> to acquire the requisite expertise.
>
>
> that MAY be the case. However, that has NOT been my experience living
> in Africa for the last 7 years. There are both biz folks AND CS
> actively involved in both real and meta-IG activities locally,
> regionally and globally. this was re-affirmed earlier this month in
> the Gambia, where I met dozens of young Africans from all over the
> continent eager to be involved in ISOC/ICANN/RIR/IGF et. al.
> activities!
>
>
> So in the absence of governmental
>> involvement there will be no involvement from those parts of the world at
>> all.
>
> see above.
>
>>
>> That might serve the interests of some quite well, but not surprisingly the
>> folks in those countries without representation are beginning to feel
>> somewhat aggrieved.
>
> Representation is not how IG is done.
>
> Governments get to say (usually) how a country code telephone
> numbering system is managed. They don't get the same control over how
> CIR's are managed. They may WANT it, but that is not reality based
> thinking.
>
>
>>
>> The desire to keep governments out of technical areas is very likely a
>> commendable one, but in that instance it behooves the supporters of that
>> position to find some other means to ensure that those currently without a
>> voice in those discussions are provided with a means to have such a
>> participation.
>
> I don't want to keep governements out of technical areas, not at all!!
>
> Last week we had a meeting of the African governmanetal Working Group
> at the African Internet Summit. It is a method of bringing them IN to
> the tech/policy side of things!
>>
>> The status quo always favours the incumbent.
>
>
> true....I would suggest that your map of the status quo is out of date.
>
--
------------------------------------------------------
anriette esterhuysen anriette at apc.org
executive director, association for progressive communications
www.apc.org
po box 29755, melville 2109
south africa
tel/fax +27 11 726 1692
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