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Key Message

The world possesses the knowledge necessary to meet Millennium Development Goals and facilitate sustainable development. Our challenge is to close the gap between the production and the use of knowledge in policy and practice.

Team


Heather Creech· Heather Creech
Director - Knowledge Communications
Carolee Buckler· Carolee Buckler
Project Manager
Terri Willard· Terri Willard
Associate

Information Society

Exploring the potential of information, communication and knowledge for sustainable development

What's New in Information Society?

  • Resource Wars and Information and Communication Technologies (PDF - 118 kb)
    IISD's Tony Vetter was investigating the impacts of information and communication technologies (ICTs) on sustainable development when he stumbled upon a troubling connection. The last time the price of the mineral tantalum (a key ingredient in compact electronics) spiked, it helped to fuel one of Africa's bloodiest-ever wars. As the demand for mobile phones rises dramatically, so again does the price of tantalum. Will the fragile Congolese democracy be tested?

As the world moves from an industrial-based economy to a more connected, knowledge-driven, "information society," it faces new and old challenges for sustainable development. The application of knowledge—as manifested in areas such as entrepreneurship and innovation; research and development; software and design; and in people's education and skills levels—is now recognized to be one of the key success factors in the global marketplace.[1] It is also crucial for ensuring that such success is environmentally, socially and economically sustainable.

There are indeed countries that show that significant advances are possible in the short and long run through implementation of strategies for increasing a country's ability to generate, obtain and apply knowledge.[2] In developing countries, reduction of poverty, child mortality and disease pandemics, as well as improvement of education, gender equality, maternal health and environmental protection, are the priorities articulated by the Millennium Development Goals. There is wide recognition[3] that the world possesses the knowledge necessary to meet these goals; the gap between the production and the use of knowledge in policy and practice, however, is also widely acknowledged. The Netherlands Development Assistance Research Council finds, for example, that the gap exists "due to weak linkages between knowledge producers and knowledge users, and between knowledge production and innovation."[4] Our own research supports these conclusions.

Over the years, IISD's research and work on the links between the emerging information society and sustainable development have focused on two areas:

IISD publishes periodic informal notes on our observations of trends and key issues in ICT for sustainable development. You can download the 2004 note (PDF - 143 kb) and the 2005 note (PDF - 151 kb).

Contents

[1] Dahlman, Carl. "World Bank Knowledge Economy: Products and Strategy: emerging lessons" in Knowledge for Development." Washington, DC: World Bank Institute, 2003.

[2] Chen, Derek H. C. and Carl J. Dahlman. "The Knowledge Economy, the KAM Methodology and World Bank Operations." Washington, DC: World Bank, 2005. 14.

[3] See, for example, Human Development Report 2005, p. 17, the official UNDP Web site, and the official World Bank Group Web site.

[4] Netherlands Development Assistance Research Council (RAWOO). "Mobilizing Knowledge to Achieve the Millennium Development Goals." 2005. 1. http://www.rawoo.nl/pdf/Rawoo27.pdf