ELAC Action Plans explained

eLAC in international relations, is an intergovernmental strategy that conceives of information and communications technologies (ICTs) as instruments for economic development and social inclusion in Latin America and the Caribbean. It is based on a public-private sector partnership[1] and is part of a long-term vision (until 2015) in line with the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), those of the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS), and now, the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). It contributes to the implementation of these long-term goals by pursuing a consecutive series of frequently adjusted short-term action plans with concrete qualitative and quantitative goals to be achieved.[2]

Strategy for the Information Society in Latin America and the Caribbean

The governments of Latin America and the Caribbean have asked the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (UNECLAC) to assist them with the international private-public sector follow up of the plan.

Aims of the eLAC Action Plans

  1. Act as a "metaplatform" for public-private action in order to coordinate the efforts of various sectors, with an end to generating synergies, avoiding the duplication of efforts, and strengthen regional projects, by means of cooperation and the exchange of best practices at a regional level.
  2. Forge national strategies and initiatives in specific areas, establishing lines of action and defining indicators that illustrate the state of progress in the development of the information society.
  3. Deepen knowledge on critical issues in order to support the definition, design, implementation and evaluation of policies.
  4. Intermediate between the needs of the region's countries and the rhythm of global development, considering regional particularities within the context of the goals of the global community.

History

Six consecutive plans have already been worked on to implement this vision:

Political background

The eLAC Regional Action Plan is the outcome of an ongoing political process.[9]

In 1999, the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations (ECOSOC) dedicated a series of high-level substantive meetings for their 2000 Period of Sessions to the theme "Development and international cooperation in the 21st century: the role of information technology in the context of a global knowledge-based economy." In response, the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean, convened by the Government of Brazil and ECLAC in July 2000, signed the Florianopolis Declaration, which focused on the use of information and communications technologies (ICTs) for development.

In this initial phase, the region's leaders recognized the importance of adopting proactive public policies to strengthen insertion in the information society and to adequately confront the digital divide, upon declaring: "that allowing the evolution of the information and knowledge-based society to be guided solely by market mechanisms entails the risk of an amplification of the social gaps existing within our societies, the creation of new modes of exclusion, an increase in the negative aspects of globalization and a widening of the distances between developed and developing countries".

As part of the international process of the World Summit on the Information Society, which took place in two phases (Geneva in 2003 and Tunis in 2005), officials from the countries of Latin America and the Caribbean intensified their efforts to create a regional perspective on the development of information societies. Various meetings held between 2001 and 2003 by the regional network of the United Nations' Working Group on Information and Communications Technologies emphasized the importance of collaboration between stakeholders interested in confronting this challenge. Moreover, the Agenda for Connectivity in the Americas and Quito Plan of Action (August 2002) insisted on the need to design realistic national strategies and action plans.

The Bávaro Declaration (January 2003) was an important step in the establishment of the fundamental principles for Latin America and the Caribbean in their transition towards information societies, given that they helped to identify the main characteristics of this phenomenon in the region. The repercussions of this document are noteworthy; in effect, since its approval, the analysis of Internet governance and open-source software were officially incorporated in the CMSI process for the first time, as issues that have come to take on great importance during this meeting and subsequent events.

In the preparatory meetings for the second phase of WSIS, which took place in Quito in May 2005 and during the Regional Ministerial Conference for Latin America and the Caribbean in Rio de Janeiro in June 2005, many years of dialogue on the relationship between ICTs, economic growth and equity culminated in the Rio de Janeiro Commitment, which comprises the Action Plan for the Information Society in Latin America and the Caribbean, known as eLAC2007.

The region has taken as its long-term strategic guide the Geneva Declaration of Principles and Plan of Action adopted at the World Summit on the Information Society, which lays down targets to be met by 2015, together with the United Nations' Millennium Development Goals. Building on the existing political consensus in the region, the governments of the countries comprising it put forward proposals at the meetings of the Preparatory Committee for the second phase of the Preparatory Committee for the second phase of the World Summit on the Information Society for the development of an Action Plan for Latin America and the Caribbean for the 2005–2007 period (eLAC2007), intending that this should be the first step along the road to 2015.

The second step was forged with the approval of the second Regional Action Plan (eLAC2010), which is embodied in the San Salvador Commitment, approved during the II Ministerial Conference on the Information Society, held in El Salvador, 6–8 February 2008.[2]

The most recent Digital Agenda for Latin America and the Caribbean has been approved in Cartagena, Colombia, May 2018. eLAC2020[10] is clearly aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals of the United Nations, and therefore expands its role in translating global ambitions into regional (which it had previous done for the Millennium Development Goals).

Impact evaluation and monitoring

One important and special character of the eLAC Action Plans is that it counts with a continuous process of evidence-based monitoring.[11] This provides policy makers with statistical evidence to evaluate the impact and progress. UN ECLAC (as the technical secretariat of eLAC has been providing this service by providing accountability through the tracking of policy goals through hundreds of graphs and tables:

There were two main structural innovation in the original eLAC2007 Action Plan that distinguished it from other similar initiatives.[11]

See also

Notes and References

  1. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.techfore.2009.01.001 "Foresight tools for participative policy-making in inter-governmental processes in developing countries: Lessons learned from the eLAC Policy Priorities Delphi"
  2. Peres, W., & Hilbert, M. (2010). Information Societies in Latin America and the Caribbean Development of Technologies and Technologies for Development. Santiago: United Nations ECLAC. Retrieved from https://repositorio.cepal.org/handle/11362/2592
  3. eLAC2007: Plan of Action for the Information Society in Latin America and the Caribbean, Adopted at the Ministerial Conference on the Information Society in Latin America and the Caribbean, Rio de Janeiro, 2005, web: http://www.cepal.org/socinfo/noticias/documentosdetrabajo/5/21685/eLAC%202007%20English.pdf
  4. eLAC2010: San Salvador Commitment, Adopted at the Second Ministerial Conference on the Information Society in Latin America and the Caribbean, San Salvador, 6–8 February 2008, web: http://www.cepal.org/socinfo/noticias/noticias/3/32363/2008-2-TICs-San_Salvador_Commitment.pdf
  5. http://www.eclac.org/eLAC
  6. https://repositorio.cepal.org/bitstream/handle/11362/38886/1/S1500758_es.pdf
  7. Web site: ELAC2020. 2016-12-21.
  8. Web site: ELAC2024. 2024-12-21.
  9. Web site: ELAC Action Plans: A personal account. by Martin Hilbert
  10. Web site: ELAC2020. 2016-12-21.
  11. Web site: ELAC Action Plans: A personal account. by Martin Hilbert
  12. Book: Benchmarking the plan of action of the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) in Latin America and the Caribbean (Version 3.0). March 2005. CEPAL.
  13. Book: Where do Latin America and the Caribbean stand in relation to the eLAC2007 Plan of Action?: Evidence from available information. October 2005. CEPAL.
  14. Book: Monitoring eLAC2007: Progress and current state of development of Latin American and Caribbean information societies. September 2007. CEPAL.
  15. Book: Monitoreo del plan eLAC2010: Avances y desafíos de la sociedad de la información en América Latina y el Caribe. November 2010. CEPAL.
  16. Book: Monitoreo del Plan de Acción eLAC2015: Cuarta Conferencia Ministerial sobre la Sociedad de la Información en América Latina y el Caribe. March 2013. CEPAL.
  17. Book: Monitoreo de la Agenda Digital para América Latina y el Caribe eLAC2018. CEPAL. 2018-04-10.