David, I will take your endorsement as seconding Stuart's nomination.
If I am not mistaken, isn't Stuart in Australia? Would it not be better to have either you or Tai represent small SIDS directly? I don't have an opinion on this; just curious.
So now we have four people, one of whom has acknowledged interest in being nominated. If we don't hear from the other three, we are left with two choices: going forward with Taran, or submitting the others as well and hoping they'll say yes after the fact.
At this point I think we should close the nominations, since we would really be pushing the ettiquette of the process if we submitted more than four names.
ac
David Leeming PFnet wrote:
I would like to echo Tai's comments. Small Islands Developing States (SIDS) suffer from enourmous challenges caused by small scale, lack of opportunity to aggregate demand, high costs, vulnerability to natural disasters, ethnic tension, lack of strategy and awareness at policy level etc etc. However, if done correctly, "telecentres" can bridge these constellations of islolated small communities in many ways. Also backing up Tai's comments further, sustainability through multi-sector partnerships is an essential strategy, that we have proven in the Solomons. We have self-sustaining Internet-based community communications facilities that are sustainable with a monthly income of not much more than it costs to buy a bubblejet ink cartridge (@ AUD 2,000 per litre of ink!!!! - so we use dot matrix printers.....). In recent research, we showed that affordability was not a major factor affecting utilisation of PFnet. The poorest of the 5 communities researched showed the second most utilisation, and all five communities had an average income of around USD1 per day or less. Therefore we need the SIDS perspective recognised.
David Leeming Technical Advisor People First Network Solomon Islands
We do not have telecentres
in the Pacific yet, other than the PFNet in the Solomon Islands. It is
very
important that we include someone to represent the small island developing states. After all, telecentres will be one strong ICT initiative that can help bridge the digital divide in our countries that are made up of
hundreds
of smaller islands. I have no objection to the nominated people so far.
But
it sounds to me that while they are experienced in telecentres etc. they
are
all from the "highly populated" developing countries. The digital divide cannot be bridged if small island developing states continue to sit on the sidelines. There telecentre issues that are unique to small island developing states. Thanks
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