http://www.tc.ca/enabling.html

Gareth Shearman shared this link with me, but its a brief enough statement,
so I clipped it in toto from the site...



Beyond the Information Society
Enabling Communities to Create the World We Want

(A statement prepared for "Paving the Road to Tunis WSIS II: The Views of
Canada's Civil Society on the Geneva Plan of Action and the Prospects for
Phase II," Winnipeg, May 13-15, 2005)

All around the world, communities are at the heart of social and economic
life. On-line and off-line, they are dynamic, creative, adaptive and
adoptive. We see communities as the social networks that will, together,
forge the "Learning Society" that national and international governments
seek to facilitate.

Each with their own context and form, communities share the following
characteristics:

   1.           Communities, whether of place, practice or interest, are
central to a Learning Society.
   2.           Communities are dynamic and self-organizing. This is the
basis of their formation and governance.
   3.           Effective communities are composed of individuals who choose
to act in a common space and who share a sense of commitment and
responsibility to others in that space.
   4.           Individuals in their communities are able to make effective
use of information and communications technologies (ICTs) to inform their
choices about what they produce, what they consume and what they do in
relation to others. This requires more than passive "access" across a
digital divide.
   5.           The internet is a global commons and a public good that is
fundamental to the networked structure of a Learning Society.

* * * *

Policies and practices that enable the transition to a Learning Society are
currently being considered on the national and international stage. But
acting to realize the opportunities of community as it goes online requires
a vision of open systems of access, design, practice, and policy debate.

To ensure those policies and practices align with the quality of community
essential to that society, we recommend that:

  *     national and international processes affirm the central role of the
individual in community as the key to world development.
  *     financial and program responses to the "digital divide" at home and
in Less Developed Countries be designed to support community-based
initiatives.
  *     changes to internet governance not impede the development of the
internet as a commons.
  *     strategies for support of ICT use and development at home and in
Less Developed Countries ensure self-identification, openness, inclusion and
participation.
  *     those working to design, implement and operate systems of ICT use
take responsibility to ensure that the characteristics of communities are
respected and included in the outcomes of their professional work and
practices.

* * * *

This statement is presented by Telecommunities Canada. We are a group of
community networking advocates and participatory researchers who act to
understand and shape the uses of ICTs in our communities. We seek to remind
Canada's public policy debates that existing community networks are
experienced in the effective use of ICTs for community development. Together
with like-minded groups, our goal is to connect policy and practice in ways
that expand and improve the ability of communities to design their own
future. 



_______________________________________________
DIGITALDIVIDE mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.edc.org/mailman/listinfo/digitaldivide
To unsubscribe, send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word UNSUBSCRIBE 
in the body of the message.

Reply via email to