The
                              21st century will usher in rapid and unprecedented
                              transformation in information technology that will
                              offer women a range of new opportunities to shape
                              the world in which we live. But these
                              opportunities will enhance our lives only if we
                              are prepared to take advantage of them.  
                               
                              We are now in the midst of a communications
                              revolution that is changing the nature of power.
                              Modern communication has drastically reduced the
                              size of the globe by practically overcoming the
                              barriers of distance and time. Information
                              technology has made communicating globally as easy
                              as conversing locally, forcing governments and
                              companies to reorient themselves further to the
                              requirements of global competition. Nation states
                              are being squeezed between the demands of global
                              competition and the social needs of local
                              populations. Globalization has already widened the
                              gap separating the haves and have-nots everywhere.
                              Unless we harness the evolving technology, the
                              future, potentially bright, will descend darkly,
                              without our knowledge, input, or permission. What
                              we must do is harness technology's powers for our
                              own uses. 
                               
                              A fundamental characteristic of the new
                              information technology is that it can be deployed
                              relatively inexpensively to all parts of the
                              world, and it can be used to support national and
                              global policies aimed at helping disadvantaged
                              individuals and communities participate in the
                              decisions that can change their lives. The new
                              information technology can help women gain the
                              knowledge, leadership, and consensus we need to
                              attain equality and social justice. To use modern
                              information technology for improving women's
                              condition we need the sort of leadership that
                              creates and uses power to realize not only
                              sustained but also equitable development. Those
                              whom the existing social structures have
                              marginalized must be empowered to participate 
                               
                              The 20th century brought phenomenal advances in
                              science and technology. Consequently, the century
                              we have just entered has the potential to bring
                              extraordinary improvements in human life.
                              Scientific advancement has brought us the
                              capability to eradicate many life-threatening
                              diseases, to prolong life, to change the nature of
                              work, and to provide for a decent living for
                              everyone. We are now capable of accumulating,
                              creating, and transmitting knowledge and
                              information across the globe at high speed and
                              relatively very little cost. We are able to
                              leapfrog the foundational problems that in the
                              past derailed social and economic development by
                              hindering communication and timely interaction.
                              [The Grameen Bank in Bangladesh, for example,
                              provides a cellular phone to a village woman,
                              helping her to establish a viable small business
                              for herself and at the same time connect her
                              community to the region and to the world. Sakeena
                              Yacoobi's organization, Creating Hope
                              International brings text books, curricula, and
                              priceless information to a group of adolescent
                              girls in the Afghan refugee camps in Pakistan
                              through a single computer. Connections that seemed
                              impossible because of infrastructure impediments
                              are now made possible through information
                              technology. But this technology is there not to
                              replace the infrastructure, but to strengthen it
                              and help it meet the challenges of today's world]. 
                               
                              We are, however, faced with an information
                              divide--a digital divide--which arises from
                              unequal access to information and knowledge and
                              unequal ability to use it for development, gender
                              equality and freedom. While people in poor
                              countries have less access to information
                              technology, women everywhere have less access than
                              do men. The International Telecommunications Union
                              estimates that 96 percent of Internet host
                              computers reside in high-income countries. There
                              are more hosts in Finland than all of Latin
                              America and more in New York than Africa. More
                              than 50 percent of the people of the United States
                              have access to the Internet, while less than one
                              percent of the people of the Middle East with a
                              comparable population are Internet users and of
                              these, only six percent are women. 
                               
                              We need to bring access to information and
                              computer technologies to the poorer countries, and
                              within each country, to the less advantaged
                              segments of the population, especially women and
                              girls. We need to bring the potential for the use
                              of the Internet to all of the peoples of the
                              world, not only the hardware and training, but
                              also culture-relative, language-relevant, and
                              community-created material. The marginalized and
                              excluded peoples of the world must become not only
                              consumers of information created elsewhere but
                              have the opportunity to become creators of
                              knowledge that is locally relevant. One model for
                              this type of project is Women's Learning
                              Partnership's collaborative efforts with our
                              partner organizations, BAOBAB for Women's Human
                              Rights in Nigeria, Association Démocratique des
                              Femmes in Morocco, and Women's Affairs Technical
                              Committee in Palestine to produce multi-media
                              training material for leadership development,
                              using the new information technologies. Our work
                              involves a process of interaction and dialogue
                              that places the newest leadership development
                              strategies within the framework of local cultural
                              and linguistic conditions. It encourages
                              leadership styles that are democratic, consensus
                              based, and horizontal. It promotes the creation of
                              learning partnerships that are open, flexible, and
                              participatory. The project involves capacity
                              building for the use of technology not as an end,
                              but as a tool for sustainable and equitable
                              development. Underlying the program is the
                              supposition that we all will be richer if we
                              partake of the diversity of human experience and
                              wisdom across the globe. If we fail to meet the
                              challenge of reaching out and including all, we
                              will likely end up living in a world unworthy of
                              the best and most humane in our vision of the
                              future.  
                               
                              The social and cultural structures we have
                              inherited in both developed and developing
                              countries favor centralized power, profit, and
                              patriarchy. They almost always self-perpetuate
                              unless we make an informed and concerted effort to
                              change them. The challenge is to opt for change
                              that shifts the ownership of the tools of
                              information technology from the few to the many,
                              in the hope that while we still must cope with the
                              exigencies of the present, our newfound power will
                              bring us closer to our dream of the future.  
                               
                              Fortunately, we are on our way to a broad-based
                              consensus on the need for cooperation among
                              governments, the private sector, local
                              communities, non-governmental organizations, and
                              international agencies to bring information
                              economies to all the peoples of the world. In the
                              last decades of the 20th century, encouraged by
                              the four world conferences on women, we were able
                              to organize national and international NGOs in
                              unprecedented numbers. We are now in a position to
                              play our role in defining the content and
                              parameters of the cooperative effort needed to
                              come closer to the world of equity and justice we
                              seek. In most countries there already exists a
                              critical mass of active women that can mediate the
                              process. We must use the possibilities modern
                              information technology offers to produce and
                              promote the sort of leadership that will empower
                              us to do our work.  
                               
                              Mahnaz Afkhami is founder and president of the
                              Women's Learning Partnership (WLP). She has
                              written and lectured extensively on women's human
                              rights, women in leadership, and women, civil
                              society, and democracy. WLP is an international,
                              non-profit, nongovernmental organizations which
                              seeks to empower women through dialogue, choice
                              and participation to restructure their roles and
                              to improve their status in their families,
                              communities, and societies. WLP creates
                              culture-specific, multi-media education tools for
                              individuals and organizations in the Global South.
                              Contact Women's
                              Learning Partnership at wlp@learningpartnership.org
                              or visit www.learningpartnership.org. 
                                
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