| "We
must recognize that information technology is here to
stay.... What we have to decide is whether we... play
the game and turn it to our advantage or lose out completely." |
| ~
Fama Alloo, Founder of the Tanzania Media Women's Association,
in Women in the Digital Age -Using Communication Technology
for Empowerment: A Practical Handbook. Society
for International Development and UNESCO |
FOREWORD:
To help women and men in developing countries overcome
the digital divide, we first need to understand the complex
relationship between gender, information technology, and development.
How can information technology be used to accelerate development
and increase gender equity? Are there barriers to women's
entry into the world of information technology? Where are
the most persistent barriers to participation? Are there regional
differences?
The
USAID
Office of Women in Development (G/WID) supported the study,
"Gender, Information Technology, and Developing Countries,"
to help answer these questions. This study examines what we
do and do not know about the gender dimension of the digital
divide. It identifies some of the key barriers to women's
participation in information technology, as well as some areas
where women already are participating in and benefiting from
the use of information technology. Dr. Hafkin and Ms. Taggart
have provided a solid foundation for USAID and our colleagues
in developed and developing countries as we look for effective
ways to address those barriers.
On
behalf of USAID's Office of Women in Development, I would
like to thank Dr. Anthony Meyer of USAID's
Center for Human Capacity Development and Dr. Dennis Foote,
Director
of the Academy for Educational Development's Learnlink Project,
for their cooperation and hard work in producing this study.
Recognition also must be given to the pioneering women and
men who are expanding the potential of information technology
as a tool for economic and social development around the world.
It is for these leaders, as well as for those who are not
yet a part of the global information society, that we have
commissioned this work.
~ Katherine M. Blakeslee
Director
Office of Women in Development
U.S. Agency
for International Development
|