Linking resources, building sustainable futures
Access is key
Creating the link
Lessons learned
Success Stories
SDNP Highlights
Linking resources, building sustainable futures
Over the last three years,
the United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP) has focused on impacting
sustainable human development
(SHD) by creating and supporting the Sustainable Development
Networking Programme (SDNP). A direct result of the
1992 United
Nations Conference on the Environment and Development (the Rio
Earth Summit), the SDNP has already linked together government
organizations, the private sector, universities, non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) and individuals in 24 developing countries
through electronic and other networking vehicles for the express
purpose of exchanging critical information on sustainable development.
At the Rio Earth Summit, environmental and economic leaders agreed
in the
Agenda 21 document that early access to and the deliberate
sharing of information and expertise between all nations was a
key component to ensuring a sustainable future for the planet.
The UNDP
Capacity 21 programme addresses this need by encouraging
developing countries to devote human and organizational resources
to sustainable development efforts.
An autonomous initiative, the SDNP enhances Capacity 21 by enabling
developing countries to share vital information and expertise.
It complements the existing human network by using every available
and appropriate communications tool, from e-mail to electronic
bulletin boards, faxes, phones and posters. Every SDNP node is
a country-owned, non-profit information networking system that
supports decision makers and key stakeholders from all sectors
of civil society on issues related to SHD. All of SDNP's efforts
are geared towards national capacity building and training.
Already the results are remarkable and the creation of a "culture
of information" is beginning to emerge in more developing
nations. For example, the SDNP has positively impacted land-use
planning in Bolivia; educated lobbyists and government officials
making environmental policy in Nicaragua; facilitated the creation
of the
African Internet Forum, a consortium of development partners
whose goal is to provide Internet access to the continent; and
saved lives in Pakistan by locating supplies of rare blood types
needed for transfusions.
The communications revolution has already enabled millions of
people to become better informed about decision making processes
in their countries, cities, villages and communities which can
improve their standard of living. The SDNP capitalizes on the
global thirst for information by identifying key sources of critical
information at the national and international levels and by providing
access to this data via electronic networks to users in developing
nations. Through the creation of national directories, the SDNP
empowers national SDNP teams to access affordable, reliable information
on a regular basis.
The information revolution provides an invaluable new set of tools
for all partners striving to achieve sustainable development.
It makes empowerment both meaningful and effective and opens
up for developing countries the prospect of leapfrogging over
earlier communication technologies to become real participants
in the global economy.
- Maurice F. Strong, former Secretary-General,the Earth Summit
The SDNP is a national information exchange operation run by
independent entrepreneurs. To establish the program in each country,
the UNDP Country office provides guidance in the formation of
a Steering Committee of individuals from stakeholder groups including
key ministries such as Environment, Health and Education; the
private sector; academia and non-governmental organizations. They
commission a feasibility study conducted by national consultants,
using
Terms of Reference custom-tailored to each country, and
if appropriate they then develop a project proposal. SDNP New
York approves the project, collaborates on recruitment decisions
and provides the necessary equipment. All equipment is configured
and tested in New York before it is shipped. All national staff
are thoroughly trained in one-on-one sessions, through global
workshops and/or with written training materials.
SDNP provides seed money, typically for two years, to enable
each node to build its own user community and shift from external
to domestic financing. Every SDNP is regarded as a service organization
that must be demand-driven to survive; consequently the long-term
viability of each SDNP rests on the entrepreneurial skills of
its National Coordinator, a Steering Committee which supports
and promotes their policies and the nourishment by a user community
whose interest is in SHD.
The desire for access to information seems virtually insatiable
and is presently driven more by non-governmental organizations,
academia and the private sector than by governments. Nonetheless,
SDNP has been in contact with over 100 governments who have reaffirmed
their willingness to encourage open access to information via
an SDNP program.
Each of these countries needs and wants to operate a national
network, although a regional approach may be more relevant where
small user communities, such as small islands, must take advantage
of economies of scale. Though few users are willing to pay for
information at the outset, once the value of that information
to their work is understood, they are more willing to contribute
toward its cost. There is hard evidence that a user community
can be steadily built and financially sustain its network.
Though the SDNP continues to evaluate other technologies like
UUCP and other low-cost alternatives, primary focus is now on
the Internet. Affordable access to the Internet is often difficult
to obtain in developing countries. Public Telecommunication Operators
(PTOs), which are generally monopolies, are facing many challenges
such as a shortage of capital, insufficient staff, and a need
to fully understand the implications of the new communications
technologies including the Internet.
Promoters of global networking should recognize that concern about
access to Western culture and certain types of information is
genuine, but can be controlled.
Effective Steering Committees are an important ingredient in a
successful SDNP. National consultants and staff can best formulate
project proposals and manage the national program. National SDNP
Coordinators should be concerned about making the already powerful
more powerful and further marginalizing the uninformed. An aggressive
outreach campaign and providing affordable access to information
are the best responses.
SDNP does not compete with or duplicate already existing networking
operations. It works with many different partners, from financial
institutions to bilaterals to national and international non-governmental
organizations. A combination of bilateral assistance joining forces
with SDNP may be more acceptable to some countries as well as
being mutually beneficial, but few administrations facilitate
this approach. SDNP has ongoing working relationships with organizations
such as the Consortium for International Earth Science Information
Network (CIESIN) and the United Nations Environment Programme's
Infoterra.
Now that the significance of access to sustainable development
information is gaining recognition, the real challenge is training
people to use the information most effectively for decision-making.
Information technologies like the Internet are significant tools
for sustainable development practitioners, but not yet as widely
used as they should be. Access to these new technologies and resources
diminishes the desire to leave the country, or not to return after
overseas training, thus minimizing the "brain drain".
Furthermore, SDNP promotes effective technical cooperation between
developing countries (TCDC).
The SDNP already operates from Pakistan to Poland, China to Chad,
and Togo to Tunisia. Another 75 countries have expressed interest
in establishing networks to stimulate SHD and many have embarked
upon or even completed feasibility studies. However, most countries
interested in initiating an SDNP are constrained by lack of financing.
Thanks to the SDNP, 180 organizations and tens of thousands of
users are part of this successful network. A country with poor
infrastructure and communication facilities, Bolivia is nonetheless
rich in its use of the SDNP guided by a creative and energetic
National Coordinator. Using everything from radio announcements
for national registration of SDNP users to sending updated cassettes
once a week to various towns, this SDNP functions exactly as it
was designed by providing easy access to information to all levels
of civil society in Bolivia.
The SDNP has transformed Pakistan from a country where information
did not flow to many areas of society to a nation on the cutting
edge of the information superhighway. When the SDNP first started,
there was only one other e-mail service provider. An energetic
SDNP team generated news stories and advertisements about the
importance of "being connected" in a variety of publications.
The result: the Pakistan SDNP now handles 2,500 nodes catering
to nearly 5,000 users country-wide through its offices in four
cities. And 8 competitive e-mail providers have entered the field
in Pakistan, encouraged by the success of SDNP.
This SDNP also offers consulting services to other e-mail providers,
which generates revenue, and it provides government institutions
with expert advice on network legislation. Additionally, it has
helped to create Usenet-type conferences and serves as the backbone
for these conferences, providing them free of cost to other e-mail
providers.
The people of Nicaragua use the SDNP as a forum to lobby their
Congress on issues related to SHD. With good staff training and
an effective Steering Committee, this SDNP has helped to update
environmental laws and has become known as the source for reliable
information on the environment and development.
The creation of an SDNP node in Estonia, as part of a link with
CIESIN and the local UNDP office, has catalyzed the organization
of local databases specifically concerned with information about
Estonia. This node routinely registers more than 30,000 hits per
week on its website.
Accessibility to information for all levels of civil society is
particularly important in a developing democracy, and Estonia
is now moving faster to benefit from the information revolution
than any other country in Eastern Europe. The country already
boasts more permanent Internet connections per capita than many
European Union members and 80% of its schools are on-line.
SDNP Highlights
- SDNP has enabled people in 24 developing nations to take a quantum
leap forward by expanding their ability to exchange information
nationally and internationally.
- Some countries have gone from very few to tens of thousands of
people who can secure access to information.
- Citizens in these countries have the power at their fingertips
to become better informed and improve their own lives.
- An estimated 5,000 institutions already utilize the SDNP network.
" Dollar for dollar, an SDNP is the biggest bang for the
buck for moving toward sustainable human development."
- Chuck Lankester, Director, SDNP
For more information
visit SDNP's website at: http://www3.undp.org/
There you will find a list of all operational SDNP's, National
Coordinators and their contact points, national feasibility studies,
project documents, workshop reports, papers, speech materials
and this brochure.
Or, contact SDNP headquarters at:
Sustainable Development Networking Programme
304 East 45th Street, Room FF-10108
New York, NY 10017
USA Tel: (212) 906-5862
Fax: (212) 906-6952
E-mail: sdnp@sdnhq.undp.org