providing digital opportunities for all
Digital Opportunity Channel logo
OneWorld channel logo
browse stories by topic
browse stories by country or region
advanced search
home
news
ICT case studies
analysis
success stories
partner news
research reports
guest column
editorial
publications
guides
full coverage: topics
full coverage: country/region
search tools
campaigns
discussions
events
join us
email digest
our partners
funding
web resources


0
0
0

Digital divides in the Pacific Islands

Dirk HR Spennemann. "Digital divides in the Pacific Islands". IT&Society, 1, 7, (Spring/Summer 2004), Pages 46-65.

Online: http://www.stanford.edu/group/siqss/itandsociety/v01i07/v01i07a04.pdf

By virtue of their physical make-up, their cultural and linguistic diversity, and the relative isolation and spread of their population, Pacific Island countries are faced with a multitude of challenges in the delivery of information services. This article reviews the nature of the digital divides that exist in the Pacific region, considering divides within countries, between the countries, and between the Pacific region and the rest of the world.

The varied but generally high costs of Internet access (in part brought about by national telecommunication monopolies) are exacerbating the digital divide along socio-economic lines; but they also create regional imbalances, with certain countries effectively isolated. Nonetheless, community-based systems can work to offset this, as shown on Niue. Within these countries at present, no structures are even envisaged that would address digital divides, nor the implications of the technologies on traditional rank, status and power structures, which are fundamental matters in Polynesian and Micronesian societies.

User comments



The FOSS - Policy and Development Implications Forum introduces the theme "FOSS & Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) – stretching the development dollar for scaling-up impact", which seeks to initiate discussion on the roles of FOSS in helping the societies in achieving the UN Millennium Development Goals.
Read more



sitemap | feedback | about us | contact us | web accessibility | privacy policy | our sponsors |  

www.digitalopportunity.org