Call#: Van Pelt Library HM851 .R6795 2009
Call#: Annenberg Library Reference Ann Ref HM851 .R6795 2009
Call#: Van Pelt Library HM851 .R6795 2009
Call#: Annenberg Library Reference Ann Ref HM851 .R6795 2009
This is a very extensive text that covers a wide range of internet policy issues. I will focus on two chapters specifically for this paper: Chapter 26 "Globalizing the logic of openess: open source software and the global governance of intellectual property" and Chapter 30 "Internet diffusion and the digital divide: the role of policy making and political institutions."
Chapter 26 will inform my discussion of the use of and debate surrounding open source software. The author argues that the global economy dictates the dissemination of information and skills necessary to complete in the era of globalization. Thus corporate powers such as Microsoft, and national powers such as the US and Western Europe are dominating the spread of information and communication technologies to the disadvantage of developing nations. Liscensing costs and copyright laws serve to protect the interests of wealthy elites and international finanical organizations, while those without access to relevant knowledge and skills fall farther behind. It is argued here that open source software is a kew way, possibly the key way, to counteract these forces of globalization that contribute to the global digital divide. Specifically the use of free and open source software in Africa is discussed as is the support for open source software offered by the United Nations and many non-governmental organizations. This will be a key text for my analysis of the use of open source software.
Chapter 30 focuses on issues surrounding the digital divide and policies that impact it. It focuses on four countries as case studies: Brazil, Estonia, Singapore and the US. The aim of this chapter is to discuss what role political policy and institutions may have in addressing the digital divide. The conclusion is that policy and leadership in a society can in fact impact the diffusion of ICT. Additionally, as I have seen in my other sources, civil society groups and non-governmental organizations are also key players in addressing issues of ICT disparity.
tagged digital_divide globalization ict internet_policy literacy open_source poverty un by cdoughe ...on 24-JUL-09



