RJES         

RUSSIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES VOL. 11, ES1003, doi:10.2205/2009ES000377, 2009

eGY-Africa: Addressing the digital divide for science in Africa

C. E. Barton
Research School of Earth Sciences, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia

C. Amory-Mazaudier
Laboratoire de Physique des Plasmas, 4 Avenue de Neptune, Saint Maur des Fosses, Cedex, France

B. Barry
Association of African Universities, P.O. Box 5744, Accra North, Ghana

V. Chukwuma
Department of Physics, Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye, Ogun State, Nigeria

R. L. Cottrell
SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Menlo Park, California, USA

U. Kalim
School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences (SEECS), Pakistani National University of Sciences and Technology (NUST), Islamabad, Pakistan

A. Mebrahtu
Physics Department, Mekelle University, Mekelle, Ethiopia

M. Petitdidier
Laboratoire d'Atmosphere, Milieux, Observations Spatiales, Velizy, France

B. Rabiu
Centre for Space Research and Applications, Federal University of Technology, Akure, Nigeria

C. Reeves
Earthworks bv, Delft, The Netherlands


Abstract

Adoption of information and communication technologies and access to the Internet is expanding in Africa, but because of the rapid growth elsewhere, a Digital Divide between Africa and the rest of the world exists, and the gap is growing. In many sub-Saharan African countries, education and research sector suffer some of the worst deficiencies in access to the Internet, despite progress in development of NRENs {National Research and Education (cyber) Networks. By contrast, it is widely acknowledged in policy statements from the African Union, the UN, and others that strength in this very sector provides the key to meeting and sustaining Millennium Development Goals. Developed countries with effective cyber-capabilities proclaim the benefits to rich and poor alike arising from the Information Revolution. This is but a dream for many scientists in African institutions. As the world of science becomes increasingly Internet-dependent, so they become increasingly isolated. eGY-Africa is a bottom-up initiative by African scientists and their collaborators to try to reduce this Digital Divide by a campaign of advocacy for better institutional facilities. Four approaches are being taken. The present status of Internet services, problems, and plans are being mapped via a combination of direct measurement of Internet performance (the PingER Project) and a questionnaire-based survey. Information is being gathered on policy statements and initiatives aimed at reducing the Digital Divide, which can be used for arguing the case for better Internet facilities. Groups of concerned scientists are being formed at the national, regional levels in Africa, building on existing networks as much as possible. Opinion in the international science community is being mobilized. Finally, and perhaps most important of all, eGY-Africa is seeking to engage with the many other programs, initiatives, and bodies that share the goal of reducing the Digital Divide either as a direct policy objective, or indirectly as a means to an end, such as the development of an indigenous capability in science and technology for national development. The expectation is that informed opinion from the scientific community at the institutional, national, and international levels can be used to influence the decision makers and donors who are in a position to deliver better Internet capabilities.

Received 30 October 2009; accepted 6 November 2009; published 24 November 2009.

Keywords: eGY-Africa, digital divide, Internet services, cyber-infrastructure, science in Africa


RJES

Citation: Barton, C. E., C. Amory-Mazaudier, B. Barry, V. Chukwuma, R. L. Cottrell, U. Kalim, A. Mebrahtu, M. Petitdidier, B. Rabiu, and C. Reeves (2009), eGY-Africa: Addressing the digital divide for science in Africa, Russ. J. Earth Sci., 11, ES1003, doi:10.2205/2009ES000377.

Copyright 2009 by the Russian Journal of Earth Sciences