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Key Message

Lessons from processes like the Global Knowledge conference series and the World Summit on the Information Society highlight the need to further integrate sustainable development principles at the international level of ICT policy making.

Global Processes

The Global Knowledge conference series organized by the Global Knowledge Partnership is one of the main global fora exploring ICT for development. At the second Global Knowledge conference (GK II) in 2000, IISD supported the work of the GK II Youth Forum. Given the high quality of the interventions by young people, the GKP committed to ensuring continued participation of youth in all of its activities.

The Third Global Knowledge conference, GK III, will be held December 11–13, 2007, in Kuala Lumpur , Malaysia. More information is available at the GKP Web site. For more information on IISD’s involvement, please e-mail us.

WSIS

The period between GK II and GK III was marked by growing recognition of the need to find ways to manage knowledge that would ensure sustainable development globally. The World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) was a four-year process aimed at opening international negotiations around all kinds of information and communication technologies, including the Internet. It consisted of two major global conferences: one held in Geneva in December 2003; and the other in Tunis in November 2005, as well as dozens of smaller ministerial meetings in between.

IISD was an active participant in the WSIS process since the first preparatory committee meeting in July 2002. Our objectives in this process were to raise the profile of three key issues:

1. the need for sustainable development to act as a guiding vision for the information society;

2. the important role of young people as leaders in using information and communication technologies (ICTs) to achieve more sustainable development in their communities and around the world; and

3. the sharing of our knowledge about the management of knowledge networks and partnerships.

Specific engagement around these themes included:

Delegates to the first phase of WSIS declared a common “commitment to build a people-centred, inclusive and development-oriented Information Society, where everyone can create, access, utilize and share information and knowledge, enabling individuals, communities and peoples to achieve their full potential in promoting their sustainable development and improving their quality of life.”[1] This pledge to sustainable development was less obvious in the Tunis stage of the process, dominated by dialogues surrounding Internet governance, financing mechanisms and the implementation of the Geneva Action Plan.

The Internet Governance Forum is one of follow-up processes to the World Summit on the Information Society.

Commentary on the WSIS