World Summit on the Information Society

WSIS (World Summit on the Information Society) is a two phase summit endorsed by the United Nations General Assembly under Resolution 56/183 to create a global multi-stakeholder platform to resolve the issues confronting information and communication technology. The summit was participated by more than 19,000 individuals from 174 countries.[1]

Background edit

The International Telecommunications Union (ITU) initiated the idea of conducting the World Summit on the Information Society(WSIS) in 1998 via Resolution 73. In 1999, the United Nations Secretary General expressed its enormous support to the proposed summit and created the framework for the summit under Resolution 56/183. The resolution also defined the role of ITU in cooperation with other interested organizatio and partners. By 2001, ITU led the preparations in holding the WSIS and decided to conduct it in two phases.The first phase of the Summits to be held in Geneva on December 10-12, 2003 and the second phase in Tunis on November 16-18, 2005.[2]

High-Level Summit Organizing Committee edit

The High-Level Summit Organizing Committee (HLSOC) was established with the support of UN Secretary General Kofi Annan to coordinate the efforts of the United Nations in the preparation, organization and holding of WSIS. The ITU Secretary General served as CHairman of HLSOC which is composed of a representative of the UN Secretary General and Executive Heads of other international organizations such as the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), World Bank, World Trade Organization (WTO), International Labor Organization (ILO), United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) etc.[3]

Members of HLSOC edit

The members of the HLSOC include:[4]

WSIS Executive Secretariat (ITU)

Other members of the Executive Secretariat include:

First Phase: Geneva 2003 edit

The first phase of the WSIS which was held in Geneva in 2003 was attended by 11,000 people from 175 countries. The main objective of the event is to create and promote commitment and political will among the participants to take action in making the information society accessible for everyone to be able to achieve their full potential and promote development and experience quality life. This objective was clearly stated in the Declaration of Principle adopted by the participants in the summit.[5] In addition, a Plan of Action was established outlining the specific goals and objectives of the overall Information Society which shall be achieved by 2015 through international cooperation.[6]

Ambassador David Gross, United States coordinator for Communication and Information Policy emphasized the "three pillars" of the U.S. governments stand at the WSIS in Geneva which include: commitment to the private sector and the rule of law must be emphasized in the summit for countries to attract the needed investments for infrastructure, intellectual property protection is needed to inspire on-going content development and security of the internet, electronic communication and electronic commerce should be maintained meaning people should feel secure from cyber attack and their privacy is also secured.[7]

Second Phase: Tunis 2005 edit

The WSIS Summit in Tunis was attended by more than 19,000 participants from different governments, international organizations, non-government organizations, civil society, business entities and members of the media. During the second phase of the summit, participants repeated their commitment and support for the Geneva Declaration and Action Plan in 2003. The summit in Tunis was focused on the financial strategies to meet the challenges faced by the Information Communication and Technology (ICT) Development. Participants in the summit identified areas of ICT development that need larger financial resources such ICT capacity-building programs, communication access and communication access for ICT services and applications in remote rural areas and small island developing states, Regional backbone infrastructure, regional networks, Network access points, broadband capacity and many other areas and issues that needs to be resolved. In addition, they also recognized the important roles of both private and public sectors in financing ICT infrastructures and they also encouraged multilateral institutions including bilateral to consider helping and providing additional financial support in regional and large scale ICT Infrastructure projects.[8]

References edit