Broadband Commission Sets New Gender Target
Pyramid Research's Sonia Jorge Participates in 7th Meeting of the Broadband Commission for Digital Development
Mar 21, 2013
BOSTON, March 21, 2013 /PRNewswire/ -- The Broadband Commission agreed on a new target designed to spur female access to the power of information and communication technologies (ICTs). Pyramid Research's Research and Consulting Director Sonia Jorge was pleased to participate in the Broadband Commission's Working Group on Gender meeting and work sessions that lead to this positive development. Held alongside the Broadband Commission for Digital Development meetings in Mexico City on March 16-17, 2013, the Working Group on Gender met for its first face-to-face meeting and agreed to deliver its first set of outcomes to the next meeting of the Commission in September.
(Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20130321/SF81339)
The new target mandates "gender equality in broadband access by the year 2020," according to the ITU's recent press release. At present, ITU figures confirm that in the developing world, women are much less likely to have access to technology than their male counterparts. While that disparity is lower in developed countries, a measureable gap still exists.
Chaired by Helen Clark, Administrator of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the Working Group on Gender featured presentations and reflections by a number of organizations and participating experts, including Changecorp, GSMA, Intel, Telecentre.org, ITU, WISAT and Pyramid Research. The Commission meeting also launched a new Task Group on the post-2015 development agenda and the future Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Along with Commissioners, special representatives and expert members of the Working Group on Gender, Pyramid Research's Sonia Jorge will continue to contribute to the Working Group's efforts and activities toward the development of the proposed outcomes.
As an international consultant in communications policy and regulation and an expert on gender and ICT for close to 20 years, Ms. Jorge is delighted to work alongside the high-level body of Commissioners and experts to develop the Working Group's work plan for 2013.
Learn more about Ms. Jorge here. To learn about Pyramid Research's research and analysis, particularly as it relates to the impact of emerging markets on the communications industry, click here.
Photos of the full meeting of the Commission and the Working Group on Gender can be viewed and downloaded from Flickr here.
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About Pyramid Research (pyramidresearch.com)
Pyramid Research offers practical solutions to the complex demands our clients face in the global communications industry. Its analysis is uniquely positioned at the intersection of emerging markets, emerging technologies and emerging business models, powered by the bottom-up methodology of our market forecasts for more than 100 countries – a distinction that has remained unmatched for more than 25 years. As a division of UBM Tech (tech.ubm.com), Pyramid Research contributes to the only integrated business information platform serving the global communications industry.
About the Broadband Commission for Digital Development (www.broadbandcommission.org)
The Broadband Commission for Digital Development was launched at ITU headquarters in Geneva in May 2010 in response to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon's call to step up UN efforts to meet the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). It is co-chaired by President Paul Kagame of Rwanda and Mr. Carlos Slim Helu, President of the Carlos Slim Foundation, with ITU Secretary-General Hamadoun Toure and UNESCO Director-General Irina Bokova serving as joint vice chairs.
Commission members comprise a high-powered international community, including prominent CEOs, top-level policy-makers and government representatives, heads of international agencies, and senior figures from academia and organizations with a development mandate. In 2011, Commissioners agreed on a set of four targets that countries around the world should strive to meet in order to ensure their populations fully participate in tomorrow's emerging knowledge societies.
SOURCE Pyramid Research