The concepts of information society and sustainable development are operationally linked, yet the two policy areas remain largely disconnected.
Internet Governance Forum: A development perspective: A primer for the third meeting, Hyderabad, India, 3–6 December 2008 (PDF - 320 kb)
Taking on a development perspective, this primer summarizes the consultations among Internet Governance Forum (IGF) contributors in preparation for the December 2008 meeting in Hyderabad, India. This summary of the consultations is organized under the following themes: IGF Review and the Way Forward; Development Theme in the Agenda-setting Dialogue; Themes and Basic Structure for IGF Hyderabad; Analysis of Workshop Proposals; and Updates on Dynamic Coalitions of Interest to the Development Community.
Discussions about coherence between information society and sustainable development policy have been limited by narrow thinking about the two terms, and by bureaucratic obstacles.
Each has emerged from a different community with a different vocabulary and process for determining national priorities. Information society specialists within national governments have primarily been drawn from the fields of telecommunications and economic development. Sustainable development has frequently been delegated solely to environment ministries, despite the best efforts of its practitioners to articulate a holistic vision of integrated economic, social and environmental decision-making.
The lack of interaction reinforces stereotypes of both fields. Sustainable development is seen as pertaining primarily to environmental issues and grassroots social development, while the information society is perceived as being more relevant to the economic development potential of urban elites. These stereotypes miss the reality that the two are operationally interconnected. For sustainable development to be effective and efficient, it must harness the institutions and tools of the information society; for the information society to sustain itself, it must pay careful attention to the stocks and flows of resources (both material and human) that underpin it.
We have investigated these intersections in a scoping study and the follow-up project which has resulted in a series of national-level case studies. Our work in the area of network and partnership evaluation has also contributed to our understanding of how ICTs contribute to development.
IISD gratefully acknowledges the generous support of Canada's International Development Research Centre (IDRC) for our ongoing work in this area.