CALL FOR AUTHORS (by the International Open Source Network)
http://www.iosn.net/asean-3/call_for_applications/call_authors_workbook_ecosystem

Note: This is the fifth of six calls the IOSN is releasing in the next few 
days. For the other
calls, please go to http://www.iosn.net/asean-3/call_for_applications


Author for Workbook: Mapping the Local FOSS Ecosystem


Duration: 6 months


Background


The International Open Source Network (IOSN) is a Center of Excellence for FOSS 
in the
Asia-Pacific Region. It shapes its activities around Free/Open Source Software 
(FOSS) technologies
and applications. Via a small secretariat based at the UNDP Regional Centre in 
Bangkok and three
centres of excellence – IOSN ASEAN+3, IOSN PIC (Pacific Island Countries), and 
IOSN South Asia,
based in Manila, Suva and Chennai respectively, the IOSN is tasked specifically 
to facilitate and
network FOSS advocates and human resources in the region. The vision is that 
developing countries
in the Asia-Pacific Region can achieve rapid and sustained economic and social 
development by
using affordable yet effective FOSS ICT solutions to bridge the digital divide.


The IOSN has produced a series of primers on Free/Open Source Software (FOSS). 
The primers serve
as introductory documents to FOSS in general, as well as covering particular 
topic areas in
greater detail. Their purpose is to raise FOSS awareness, particularly among 
policy-makers,
practitioners and educators. The following are summaries of the primers have 
been published, or
are currently being produced.


    * General Introduction
    * Government
    * Localization
    * Education
    * Network, Security and Infrastructure
    * Licensing
    * Open Access Content
    * Open Standards


In 2006, the IOSN helped publish the “Roadmap to an ICT Ecosystem” by the 
Berkman Center for
Internet & Society. This roadmap details the process by which local 
stakeholders can interact to
promote the promotion of ICT in many aspects of society. Its intent was to be 
as a “a
user-friendly tool for understanding what open ICT (Information and 
Communication Technologies)
ecosystems are, why they are embraced and how to evolve them.”


Although there are numerous FOSS advocates in most countries, these discrete 
groups generally do
not interface effectively in a way that facilitates FOSS adoption with a wider 
range of end users.
Following the initiatives shown by the Roadmap, this proposal aims to 
commission a workbook that
will assist local stakeholders map their country’s ICT ecosystem, and 
subsequently, clarify how
FOSS can support as well as be supported by this ecosystem. The workbook serves 
as both an
awareness tool as well as a management tool where local stakeholders map 
themselves to specific
components of the roadmap and commit to their role in maintaining an open ICT 
ecosystem.


The workbook is intended to be used by FOSS and/or ICT advocates in any given 
country (civil
society, consumer groups, small-to-medium enterprises, government, etc) with 
the intent of
organizing the body of knowledge and relevant aggregates towards a deeper 
understanding of how
FOSS can nurture a vibrant ICT-oriented society.




Objectives


    * Provide a structured and programmed approach to mapping the stakeholders 
in an ICT ecosystem
fostering greater awareness and interaction among these stakeholders


    * Create interest between stakeholders in the FOSS ecosystem and nurture 
mutually beneficial
relationships among themselves


In addition this paper will:


➢ Introduce Free/Open Source Software, Open Standards, and Open Content. 
It will refer to
previous primers already published by the IOSN and explain the spectrum in 
which these co-exist.

➢ Provide a rationale for the use of Open Standards, Open Source, and 
Open Content for many
aspects of society

➢ Provide case studies where a healthy local ICT ecosystem has 
contributed to faster
adoption of FOSS and vice-versa

➢ Profile FOSS-oriented organizations worldwide in general and in the 
Asia Pacific region,
in particular describing how these organizations play out in their own 
loco-regional environments

➢ Enumerate the steps to take to organize the mapping activity and how 
stakeholders can
benefit from such. It will also recommend activities to organize post-mapping 
which can help
nurture the ecosystem.




Duties and Responsibilities of the Author


The Author will be required to carry out the following:

➢ Conduct background research on Open Standards, Open Source, Open 
Content, and ICT
ecosystems, particularly in the Asia-Pacific context.
➢ Review and analyze existing FOSS-based applications (as above)
➢ Produce a first draft according to objectives as described above.
➢ Provide drafts of the primer taking into account the feedback provided 
by UNDP-IOSN
according to the timeline below.
➢ Consolidate and compile feedback based on a select list of peer 
reviewers approved by
UNDP-IOSN, and make the necessary revisions.
➢ Ensures that the publication material conforms to the UNDP Style 
Manual, December 2002
version.

For more details, please see
http://www.iosn.net/asean-3/call_for_applications/call_authors_workbook_ecosystem

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