Katz, Jorge;
Hilbert, Martin
Road maps towards an information society in Latin
America and the Caribbean. Santiago de
Chile : ECLAC, 2003. 119 p. (ECLAC books, 72)
Preface
The concept of an
"information society" refers to a paradigm which is profoundly
changing the world in which we live at the beginning of this new millennium.
This transformation is being driven primarily by new ways of creating
and disseminating information using digital technologies. Information
flows, communications and coordination mechanisms are being digitized
in many different sectors of society, and this process is gradually
giving rise to new ways of organizing society and production. While
this form of "digital conduct" is becoming an increasingly
global phenomenon, it has its origins in what are, for the most part,
mature industrial societies. Indeed, the adoption of this technology-based
paradigm is strongly correlated with a society's degree of development.
However, technology is not only the child of development (as it derives
from the development process), but is also, to a large extent, its parent
(since it is also a tool for development).Viewed from the perspective
of Latin America and the Caribbean, the question of how to employ this
emerging paradigm to achieve broader development goals and to integrate
the region more fully into the global information society is an issue
of paramount importance. In order to tackle the challenging task of
integrating the paradigm of the information society into the development
agenda, ECLAC is seeking to address three key questions:
First of all, what
kind of "information society" is desired? Based on an analytical
framework developed by ECLAC for the consideration of the many complex
issues involved in the construction and operation of an information
society, it is of vital importance to determine the purpose and aims
of all lines of action oriented towards the transition to an information
society. The first chapter of this study lays the groundwork for such
an analysis.Secondly, what are the basic characteristics and specific
traits of the transition towards an information society in Latin America
and the Caribbean? In order to understand what current and future paths
the region can choose to follow in making the transition to an information
society, the second chapter reviews some of the specifically regional
features of the current process.
Thirdly, what policies
can be used to support the transition towards an information society?
The third and final chapter proposes an agenda for Latin America and
the Caribbean in the transition to an information society.
To support such
national and regional initiatives, ECLAC initiated a research project
which led from the Florianópolis Declaration, in which, for the
first time, the Latin American and Caribbean countries expressed their
"shared aspirations ? to become full-fledged members of the information
society" (Florianópolis, June 2000), to the Bávaro
Declaration (January 2003). The Regional Preparatory Ministerial Conference
of Latin America and the Caribbean for the World Summit on the Information
Society took place in Bávaro, Punta Cana, Dominican Republic,
from 29 to 31 January 2003. The meeting, organized by the Government
of the Dominican Republic and ECLAC, formed part of the worldwide preparation
process for the World Summit on the Information Society, which will
take place in two stages: the first in 2003 in Geneva, Switzerland,
and the second in 2005 in Tunisia (United Nations General Assembly resolution
56/183). The present book was prepared by ECLAC for this preparatory
process and served as a basis for discussion at the Bávaro meeting.
The concluding Bávaro Declaration serves as the region's contribution
to the World Summit on the Information Society.An annex to this publication
provides the text of the Bávaro Declaration, which was adopted
at the Regional Preparatory Ministerial Conference of Latin America
and the Caribbean for the World Summit on the Information Society. In
this declaration, the countries of the region, recognizing that the
information society is an economic and social system where knowledge
and information constitute fundamental sources of well-being and progress,
adopted a series of guiding principles for the transition to an information
society and identified priority issues to which special importance should
be assigned in the coming years.
http://www.eclac.cl/publicaciones/DesarrolloProductivo/1/LCG2195Rev1PI/lcg2195i.pdf