International Telecommunication Union (ITU)
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1. Introduction
1.1 Objectives and main activities
The overall objectives of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) are
to promote the development of telecommunication networks and access to telecommunication
services by fostering cooperation among governments and a range of non-governmental
actors that includes network operators, service providers, equipment manufacturers,
scientific and technical organisations, financial organisations and development
organisations.
The ITU’s main activities include:
- Standardising telecommunications technologies, services and operations, including
tariffs and numbering plans.
- Allocating radio frequency bands to different services and coordinating and
registering frequency assignments and satellite orbital positions so as to
avoid harmful interference.
- Promoting the development of telecommunications infrastructure and services,
regulatory institutions, and human resources in developing countries.
- Providing information on global telecommunications trends and developments.
1.2 Legal/constitutional composition
The ITU is founded on a set of treaties dating back to 1865 that have binding
force in international law – the ITU Constitution and Convention, the Radio Regulations,
and the International Telecommunication Regulations – as well as resolutions, recommendations
and other non-binding instruments adopted by its conferences.[1]
Although it is an intergovernmental organisation, a large number of private
sector entities and other non-governmental actors are members of the ITU and participate
in its work. This is a longstanding arrangement that reflects the important role
non-governmental actors have played since the days of the telegraph in developing
telecommunications technologies, networks and services. The current ITU Constitution
provides for three distinct classes of membership – member states, sector members,
and associates – with differing rights and obligations.
The ITU is organised into three sectors – Radiocommunication, Telecommunication
Standardisation and Telecommunication Development – known respectively as ITU-R,
ITU-T and ITU-D. Much of the substantive work of the ITU is done by its members
in sector meetings with administrative support from the three sector bureaus: the
Radiocommunication Bureau (BR), Telecommunication Standardisation Bureau (TSB)
and Telecommunication Development Bureau (BDT). Each bureau is headed by a director.
The ITU General Secretariat provides common services to support the activities
of the sectors. It also organises world and regional TELECOM exhibitions and forums
as well as smaller scale seminars and workshops, and publishes reports on trends,
developments and emerging issues. It is headed by a secretary-general who is responsible
for the overall management of the ITU and is assisted by a deputy secretary-general.
ITU activities are funded mainly through a “free choice” system in which member
states and sector members select the number of contributory units they wish to
pay from a sliding scale that ranges from 40 units at the top end to one sixteenth
of a unit at the bottom. Because they do not have the same rights as member states,
most notably the right to vote, the value of a sector member unit is only a fraction
of the value of a member state unit (currently one fifth). The fees paid by associates
in turn are fractions of the value of a sector member unit, reflecting their more
limited rights to participate in ITU activities.[2]
The monetary value of the contributory unit is adjusted every two years as part
of the ITU budget process. The values of member state and sector member contributory
units currently stand at CHF 318,000 (USD 260,627) and CHF 63,600 (USD 52,125)
respectively. The fees charged to associates range between CHF 1,987.50 (USD 1,628)
and CHF 10,600 (USD 8,687), depending on the sector with which they are associated
and the countries from which they come.
In addition to membership fees, the ITU derives significant revenues from the
sale of publications and other cost recovery activities. These activities currently
account for about 15% of total revenues.
1.3 Key members/participants and decision-making structures
The ITU membership currently includes191 member states that have the right to
take part in all activities, 643 sector members that have the right to take part
in all the activities of the sector(s) to which they belong, and 132 associates
that have the right to take part in some activities of the sector(s) with which
they are associated (e.g. the meetings of an individual study group).[3]
Overall governance is provided by the Plenipotentiary Conference, which meets
every four years to amend the ITU Constitution and Convention, approve strategic
and financial plans, adopt policies that may apply to the organisation as a whole
or to one or more specific sectors, and elect the secretary-general, the deputy
secretary-general and the directors of the three bureaus. The Plenipotentiary Conference
also elects the twelve members of the Radio Regulations Board, a part-time body
that oversees the operations of the BR on behalf of the member states.
In addition to these officials, the Plenipotentiary Conference elects countries
to serve on the ITU Council. This body meets annually and is empowered to govern
between Plenipotentiary Conferences. It is composed of one quarter of the ITU state
membership (currently 46 members) and elections are structured to ensure that the
five ITU administrative regions are fairly represented in terms of the number of
member states in each region.
Each ITU sector has its own governance structure composed of:
- Periodic assemblies (in ITU-R and ITU-T) or conferences (in ITU-D) that provide
overall direction to sectoral activities
- Advisory boards drawn from the membership that guide sectoral activities
in the period between conferences
- Study groups that examine issues and develop recommendations in specific
subject areas.
The World Telecommunication Standardisation Assembly and the World Telecommunication
Development Conference meet every four years to plan sectoral work, as well as
to elect advisory group and study group chairs and vice-chairs.
The Radiocommunication Assembly, the equivalent body in ITU-R, meets every three
to four years in conjunction with the Radiocommunication Conference, a treaty-making
event which has the power to amend the Radio Regulations.
The ITU Constitution provides for one other governance structure: the World
Conference on International Telecommunications (WCIT), a treaty-making event that
has the power to amend the International Telecommunication Regulations (ITRs).[4]
1.4 Relations with other international institutions and the multilateral system
The ITU has been a specialised agency of the United Nations since 1947. From
an administrative point of view, it is part of the UN “common system” of administrative
regulations, rules and procedures that governs the terms and conditions of employment
of ITU staff and elected officials and also sets general policies and standards
for financial, human resources and information systems management.
The UN and other specialised agencies have the right to attend ITU conferences
as observers. Some UN agencies take an active interest in the work of the ITU either
because their constituencies are major users of telecommunications – e.g. the International
Civil Aviation Organisation, the International Maritime Organisation, the United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) – or because
of a shared interest in development – e.g. the United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP).
In addition to these links with the UN system, the ITU has close relations with
the 79 intergovernmental and non-governmental international and regional organisations,
11 regional intergovernmental telecommunications organisations and 5 intergovernmental
organisations operating satellite systems that take part in its work as sector
members.
As a result of the important roles they have played in driving telecommunications
liberalisation over the past ten to fifteen years, the ITU has attempted to develop
strong relations with the World Bank and the World Trade Organisation (WTO).
1.5 Commitment to development
The 1984 report of the ITU Independent Commission for World Wide Telecommunication
Development, popularly known as the Maitland Commission after its chairman, highlighted
the “missing link” in developing countries and internationally between the development
of telecommunications and overall economic and social development (ITU, 1984).
As a result of this report and as part of a comprehensive reform effort that
began in the late 1980s in response to changes that were taking place in the telecommunications
environment (i.e. privatisation, liberalisation, competition), the ITU upgraded
its commitment to development in 1992 when it established ITU-D.
About 25% of the ITU budget is allocated to ITU-D (vs. about 35% to ITU-R, 18%
to ITU-T and 21% to the General Secretariat).
In addition, there is a constitutional obligation for the directors of the radiocommunication
and standardisation bureaus to provide technical support to the development sector.
This is typically done through workshops and seminars to help build developing
country capacity in relation to ITU-R and ITU-T activities.
1.6 Commitment to gender equality
The 2002 Marrakech Plenipotentiary Conference adopted Resolution 70, “Gender
Mainstreaming in ITU” (ITU, 2002), which called on member states and sector members
to promote gender equality in their activities; resolved to improve socioeconomic
conditions for women, particularly in developing countries, by mainstreaming the
gender perspective in telecoms development programmes; and to incorporate the gender
perspective in the ITU strategic plan and the operational plans of the sectors.
The 2006 Antalya Plenipotentiary Conference updated this resolution to take
account of developments inside and outside the ITU since 2002, particularly the
results of the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) and the 2006 Doha
World Telecommunication Development Conference.[5]
In renewing Resolution 70, the Antalya conference adopted the broader goal of “promoting
gender equality towards all-inclusive information societies” in addition to gender
mainstreaming in the ITU. The conference also amended the ITU Constitution and
Convention to indicate that their language should be considered as gender neutral.
The revised resolution tasks the Council with accelerating gender mainstreaming
activities. It instructs the secretary-general to ensure that the gender perspective
is incorporated in the work programmes, management approaches and human resource
development activities of the ITU, and to report annually to Council on progress
made.
1.7 Southern actors and civil society participation
Virtually all developing countries are members of the ITU. Like developed countries,
each of them is represented in the ITU by their telecommunication administration,
i.e. the government department or agency responsible for international telecommunication
policy.
A significant number of non-governmental entities and organisations from developing
countries and regions are ITU sector members. Some 548 of the ITU’s 643 sector
members are national entities. Under the membership structure set out in the ITU
Constitution and Convention, these entities are classed as recognised operating
agencies (ROAs), scientific and industrial organisations (SIOs), or financial and
development institutions.
These 548 national entities come from 110 different countries. Slightly more
than half of them are from non-OECD countries. The 229 ITU sector members that
come from these 90 developing countries include 48 sector members from South and
East Asia, 46 from sub-Saharan Africa, 39 from North Africa, 37 from the Near and
Middle East, 17 from Eastern Europe, 17 from South America, 11 from Central America
and the Caribbean, and 6 from Central Asia.
Of the 229 developing country sector members, 126 are only members of the development
sector. The other 103 are members of the radiocommunication and/or standardisation
sectors as well. The developing country members of these two sectors are drawn
from 51 different non-OECD countries.
In addition to national entities, ITU sector membership includes 79 regional
and other international organisations (REINTORGs), 11 regional telecommunications
organisations (REGORGs), and five intergovernmental organisations operating satellite
systems (SATORGs). Of these, 28 REGINTORGs, 9 REGORGs, and 3 SATORGs represent
regions that are exclusively or largely composed of developing countries.
There are currently 132 associate members of the ITU – 123 national entities,
of which 7 are based in developing countries, and 9 regional and other international
organisations, of which 2 are based in largely developing regions.
Because the ITU membership structure does not include a class of civil society
entities and organisations[6] – and
in the absence of a generally agreed definition of “civil society” – it is difficult
to be precise about the extent to which civil society entities and organisations
participate in the work of the ITU, either as sector members or as associates.
If civil society is broadly defined to include not-for-profit scientific and
technical organisations, as well as organisations representing non-business users
of telecommunication services and/or communities, a significant proportion of the
ITU’s regional and other international organisation membership could be considered
to be part of civil society. However, if not-for-profit scientific and technical
organisations are excluded from the definition of civil society, there currently
is very little civil society participation in the ITU.
2. Role and responsibilities in ICTs
2.1 General orientation
As a technical organisation, the ITU’s general orientation is to promoting the
development of telecommunications technologies and access to networks and services.
This involves it in a wide range of issues related to scientific research, experimental
development, equipment manufacturing, software engineering, network planning, infrastructure
deployment, service provisioning, interconnection, charging and revenue sharing,
information and network security, human resource development, telecommunications
industry financing, and regulation.
Although there is a high degree of correlation between the development of telecommunications
and overall economic and social development, the ITU’s primary orientation is to
“the development of telecommunications” – including infrastructure, services, applications
and regulatory arrangements – rather than to “telecommunications for development”.
2.2 Responsibilities in relation to the WSIS
On the basis of a proposal from Tunisia, the 1998 ITU Minneapolis Plenipotentiary
Conference adopted a resolution that called on the United Nations to hold a World
Summit on the Information Society. It instructed the ITU secretary-general to pursue
the matter with the UN secretary-general and the executive heads of other UN agencies
and programmes, whose activities are coordinated through the body now known as
the UN Chief Executives Board (CEB).[7]
The proposal was enthusiastically received when it was presented to this body
in the spring of 1999. The secretary-general proceeded to develop a plan that involved
holding the summit in two phases – the first in Geneva in 2003 and the second in
Tunis in 2005. This plan was approved by the ITU Council and subsequently endorsed
by the UN General Assembly in 2001. The General Assembly asked the ITU secretary-general
to take lead responsibility for managing the summit process in conjunction with
other interested agencies.
The ITU secretary-general served as WSIS secretary-general and chaired the High-Level
Summit Organising Committee. Within the ITU, the General Secretariat’s Strategic
Planning and External Affairs Units provided core support for the substantive and
procedural aspects of the WSIS process with assistance from the sectoral bureaus,
particularly the BDT. The ITU’s internal resources were augmented by contributions
from some ITU member states and sector members, as well as the Canton of Geneva.
The Tunis Agenda for the Information Society included separate follow-up frameworks
for ICT financial mechanisms, internet governance, and the eleven action lines
contained in the agenda.
With respect to the action lines, the Tunis Agenda asked the UN Economic and
Social Council (ECOSOC) to monitor implementation on behalf of the General Assembly.
It also asked the CEB to set up a United Nations Group on the Information Society
(UNGIS) to coordinate the activities of UN departments and agencies. This group
has been established and is currently chaired by the ITU secretary-general.
The Tunis Agenda identified organisations to moderate and facilitate multi-stakeholder
partnerships in relation to each one of the eleven action lines. It tasked the
ITU with this responsibility for action line C2: Information and communication
infrastructure, and action line C5: Building confidence and security in the use
of ICTs. In addition, it asked the ITU to lead in coordinating the facilitation
process, along with UNESCO and the UNDP.
Between the first and second phases of the Summit, the ITU conducted a stocktaking
exercise which resulted in an extensive inventory of stakeholder activities related
to the Geneva Plan of Action, which is structurally similar to the Tunis Agenda.
Following the second phase of the Summit, the ITU updated this inventory, which
now includes more than 3000 activities, and also compiled a Golden Book of new
commitments made at the Tunis phase.
3. Description and analysis of ICT activities in 2006
3.1 Activities in relation to the WSIS
The ITU undertook a number of activities specifically related to the WSIS in
2006.
The ITU secretary-general has taken the lead within the UN system in facilitating
and coordinating WSIS follow-up activities. As mentioned above, the ITU secretary-general
currently chairs the United Nations Group on the Information Society. The ITU website
is the repository for the WSIS documents and for information regarding WSIS follow-up.
In addition, the secretary-general has launched a “Connect the World” initiative
– an ambitious effort involving partners from industry, government, international
organisations and civil society to bridge the “digital divide” and connect the
unconnected by creating an enabling environment, developing infrastructure, and
promoting applications.
The ITU-D World Telecommunication Development Conference that took place in
Doha, Qatar in March 2006 adopted the Doha Declaration and the Doha Action Plan
(ITU, 2006a) – documents that set out the policy agenda and work programme for
ITU-D for the next four years.
These two documents seek to position ITU-D as a key player in the implementation
of the WSIS outcomes, particularly in areas that fall within the “core competencies”
of the ITU, which are identified as including assistance in bridging the “digital
divide”, international and regional cooperation, radio spectrum management, standards
development, and dissemination of information. They enjoin ITU members to engage
in implementation of the WSIS outcomes, including the eleven action lines set out
in the Annex to the Tunis Agenda for the Information Society, particularly those
in which the ITU has been given lead coordination and facilitation responsibilities.
More concretely, the Doha Action Plan sets out:
- Six programmes (regulatory reform, technologies and telecommunications network
development, e-strategies and e-services/applications, economics and finance,
human capacity building, and a special programme for the LDCs).
- Two activities (statistics and information on telecommunication, partnerships
and promotion).
- Special and regional initiatives.
The plan contains a table cross-referencing all of these programmes and activities
to the eleven action lines in the Tunis Agenda. However, it acknowledges that more
than a simple cross-referencing of activities may need to be done to strengthen
the links between the ITU’s efforts to develop telecommunications and the WSIS
plan to use telecommunications and other ICTs more effectively for development.
It notes that “ITU-D functions may be reviewed taking into account WSIS outcomes.”
In May 2006, in collaboration with the Korea Agency for Digital Opportunity
and Promotion (KADO)[8] and the United
Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD),[9]
the ITU Strategy and Policy Unit published the World Information Society Report
2006 (ITU, 2006b). The general purpose of this report is to measure worldwide
progress towards the information society, and in particular to chart progress towards
the implementation of WSIS outcomes. To do this, the report’s authors have developed
a Digital Opportunity Index (DOI)[10]
– a composite index composed of eleven indicators that measure opportunity (i.e.
availability and cost of internet and ICT access networks), infrastructure (i.e.
uptake of internet and ICT access technologies by households and individuals),
and utilisation (i.e. the use made of these technologies for internet and ICT access
as a proportion of total telecommunications use). The report uses the DOI to compare
progress towards the information society in different countries and regions, as
well as to identify different strategies and policy options.
In November 2006, the Antalya Plenipotentiary Conference adopted a resolution
on “ITU’s role in implementing the outcomes of the World Summit on the Information
Society”. This resolution instructs the secretary-general to:
- Take all necessary measures for the ITU to play a leading facilitating role
in the overall WSIS implementation process, along with UNESCO and the UNDP.
- Lead in facilitating the implementation of the WSIS action lines relating
to infrastructure development (C2) and cybersecurity (C5).
- Participate in the implementation of other action lines that fall within
the ITU’s mandate (essentially all the other action lines except those dealing
with cultural and linguistic diversity, local content, media, and the ethical
dimensions of the information society).
- Ensure that all of this is done in cooperation with other bodies involved
in WSIS follow-up, in a coordinated fashion.
The resolution also instructs the directors of the three bureaus to support
WSIS follow-up activities.
The ITU Council will receive annual progress reports from the Secretariat and
will maintain the Working Group on the World Summit on the Information Society
(WG-WSIS) that was set up during the summit process to provide ongoing guidance
to follow-up activities.
3.2 Other ICT-related activities
As well as adopting a general resolution on the ITU’s overall role in WSIS implementation,
the Antalya Plenipotentiary Conference adopted a number of resolutions that
address aspects of internet governance – one of the main topics of the Tunis phase
of the Summit and a key area of WSIS follow-up that is of particular concern to
developing countries and civil society.
In recognition of the convergence that is taking place between telecommunications
and the internet, particularly through the development of voice over internet protocol
services (VoIP) and next generation networks (NGNs), Resolution 101 on “Internet-Protocol-based
networks” resolves that the ITU shall clearly identify the range of internet-related
issues that fall within its responsibility, collaborate with other relevant organisations
to maximise benefits of IP-based networks, and continue to study international
internet connectivity as an urgent matter, as called for in the Tunis Agenda.
More specifically in relation to the results of the WSIS, Resolution 102 on
“ITUs role with regard to international public policy issues pertaining to the
internet and the management of internet resources, including domain names and addresses”
instructs the secretary-general to continue to take a significant role in international
discussions and initiatives related to the management of internet names, addresses
and other resources, and to take the steps necessary for the ITU to continue to
play a facilitating role in the coordination of international public policy issues
pertaining to the internet, as expressed in the Tunis Agenda. The resolution also
instructs the directors of the standardisation and development bureaus to support
these actions.
Resolution 133 on the “Role of administrations of Member States in the management
of internationalised (multilingual) domain names” instructs the secretary-general
and the directors of the bureaus to take an active part in all international discussions,
initiatives and activities on the deployment and management of internationalised
domain names, in cooperation with relevant organisations.
The Antalya Conference also updated Resolution 130 on “Strengthening the role
of ITU in building confidence and security in the use of information technologies”
to reflect the priority that the WSIS gave to this issue and the ITU’s leadership
role in the implementation of WSIS action line C5.
In addition to these resolutions on internet governance, the Antalya Conference
adopted a number of other resolutions on ICTs and development, including resolutions
on:
- Special measures for the least developed countries and small island developing
states
- Assistance and support to countries in special need for rebuilding their
telecommunications sector
- ICTs in the service of humanitarian assistance
- Support for the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD)
- Support for the Agenda for Connectivity in the Americas and Quito Action
Plan
- Next generation network deployment in developing countries.
Ten days after the close of the Antalya Conference, ITU TELECOM WORLD 2006
opened in Hong Kong.[11] ITU world
and regional TELECOM events combine exhibitions that showcase that latest ICT technologies
with forums that feature high-level speakers and panellists from the private and
public sectors. Under the overall theme of “Living in the Digital World”, the 2006
TELECOM world forum explored three domains: “digital lifestyle” (how current and
future lifestyles are shaped by ICTs); “digital ecosystems” (how different kinds
of companies interlink, cooperate and compete); and “digital society” (the challenges
in maintaining a transparent regulatory environment and building an information
society for all).
Because they are market-oriented events, TELECOMs provide an interesting point
of comparison for other ITU activities, such as the Doha World Telecommunication
Development Conference and the Antalya Plenipotentiary Conference, in terms of
participants and programmes. Although there are echoes of WSIS in the TELECOM WORLD
2006 forum programme and some developing country speakers in the digital society
domain, the almost complete absence of developing country keynote speakers and
panellists in the sessions on digital ecosystems and digital lifestyles reflects
the very great differences of capacity that currently exist among countries and
regions and the magnitude of the ICTs-for-development challenge.
4. Stakeholder participation
4.1 Key areas in which participation of civil society, Southern countries and women is an issue
In 2002, the Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation and Panos London published
Louder Voices (MacLean et al, 2002), a study of developing country
participation in international ICT decision-making. This study noted that it is
important to distinguish between the presence of developing countries, civil society,
and women in international ICT decision-making forums on the one hand, and their
effective participation on the other. The ITU, which was the subject of a Louder
Voices institutional study, is a case in point.
Developing countries are present at many ITU meetings. They tend to be most
strongly represented at the major conferences and assemblies, including those of
the radiocommunication and standardisation sectors, and are well represented in
all the activities of the development sector. However, presence does not equate
to effective participation, which – as Louder Voices pointed out – requires
capacities to forecast issues, conduct research, set agendas, coordinate action
at national and regional levels, negotiate successfully before and during events,
implement decisions, and evaluate results.
The situation regarding developing country participation is especially challenging
in meetings dealing with technical matters. This is particularly the case in the
standardisation sector where, with the exception of the study groups dealing with
numbering and tariff questions, the work is done almost exclusively by representatives
of sector members. Without the technical and financial capacities required to contribute
to this work, or at least follow its development, there is little reason to be
present. Many developing countries are therefore effectively excluded from some
of the ITU’s most important work. As indicated in the section on Southern partners
and civil society participation, at present there are no radiocommunication or
standardisation sector members from 110 of the ITU’s 191 member states – and all
110 are developing countries.[12]
Civil society faces three main issues in seeking to participate in the work
of the ITU: the ITU’s membership structure, which has been described above; the
cost of meeting attendance; and the ITU’s working methods, which require its members
to have significant technical capacities in order to contribute effectively to
decision-making in many areas of activity.
In principle, ITU sector membership is open to both national and international
civil society organisations. However, the requirement for all national entities
and some kinds of regional and international organisations seeking sector membership
to be approved by the governments of the countries where they are based, or alternatively
by the ITU Council, may pose obstacles in some cases. The requirement to make financial
contributions either as full sector members or as associates is an additional obstacle.
Finally, the cost of attending the meetings where ITU members do their work and,
in the case of the radiocommunication and standardisation sectors, the technical
expertise required to contribute meaningfully to the work of the ITU may pose additional
problems.
For civil society organisations, the work of the development sector is likely
to be of most interest, and the one to which they can contribute most effectively.
Financial barriers to ITU-D participation are also lower than in the other sectors.
In ITU-D, sector members can pay one eighth of a sector member unit – CHF 7,950
(USD 6,515) at current values – while sector members from LDCs are only obliged
to contribute one sixteenth of a sector member unit, or CHF 3,975 (USD 3,257).
ITU-D associates pay one twentieth of a sector member unit, CHF 3,180 (2,606),
unless they are from LDCs, in which case they pay one fortieth, or CHF 1,590 (USD
1,303).
In ITU-R and ITU-T on the other hand, sector members must contribute at least
one half a sector member unit as an annual membership fee – CHF 31,800 (USD 26,061)
at current values. Associate status in these sectors may be a more attractive option
than full sector membership, although the cost, CHF 10,600 (USD 8,688) in annual
fees, may be prohibitive.
In addition to the cost of sector membership or associate status, the cost of
ITU publications and the restrictions the ITU places on online access to some information
resources, such as conference documents, may also constitute significant barriers
to civil society engagement with ITU activities. Although ITU membership includes
certain privileges, such as a 15% discount on the price of hard copy publications,
the value of these benefits in relation to their cost is unlikely to stimulate
interest in sector membership or associate status among civil society organisations,
which would need to pay thousands of Swiss francs annually in fees to save hundreds
on the price of publications.
The WSIS process appears to have sensitised member states to the advantages
of involving civil society in the work of the ITU – or at least in activities related
to WSIS follow-up. While recognising the key role played by civil society entities
and organisations in building the global information society, ITU member states
are also concerned about the potential impact of greater civil society involvement
on the intergovernmental character of the ITU, its current membership structure,
and its finances.
The level of participation by women in the work of the ITU generally reflects
their participation in international telecommunications policy-making in national
governments, as well as their participation in the non-governmental entities and
organisations that do much of the technical work of the ITU.
Although women from both developing and developed countries have assumed important
leadership roles in the work of the ITU in recent years (e.g. as chairpersons of
Council and Radiocommunication conferences), and although they are invariably present
in at least limited numbers on the delegations of governments and sector members
to ITU meetings, ITU events often have the appearance of being meetings of an “old
boys club”.
The current under-representation of women in the scientific and engineering
professions that do much of the technical work of the ITU clearly limits the possibilities
for greater gender balance in many forums. The development sector may be more fertile
ground for increasing participation by women, particularly if it becomes less technical
in its orientation and more closely attuned to the development mainstream.
4.2 Actions taken to ensure effective participation
In order to promote greater developing country participation in the technical
work of the ITU, the Antalya Plenipotentiary Conference adopted Resolution 123
on “Bridging the standardisation gap between developing and developed countries”.
This resolution recognises that developing countries require a certain level of
technical capacity in order to be able to apply ITU-R and ITU-T standards, quite
apart from the capacity required to contribute to their development. It invites
member states and sector members to contribute to a fund that would help bridge
the standardisation gap and to otherwise support actions taken by the secretary-general
and the directors to this end.
With respect to civil society participation, the Antalya Conference adopted
a resolution concerning “Study of the participation of all relevant stakeholders
in the activities of the Union related to the World Summit on the Information Society”
(ITU, 2006c). This resolution instructs the Council to set up a working group,
open to all ITU member states, to undertake consultations and prepare a final report,
well in advance of the next plenipotentiary conference in 2010. The terms of reference
of this working group include:
Establishing a set a criteria for defining which stakeholders are relevant to
participate in ITU activities related to the WSIS.
Analysing the definitions of sector member and associate and the related provisions
of the legal instruments of the ITU and how they could be amended as necessary
and applied to enhance ITU membership.
Reviewing existing mechanisms – such as partnerships, symposiums, seminars,
workshops, focus groups, policy forums and experts – in order to consider how they
could be used more effectively and to identify possible new mechanisms to broaden
participation.
Identifying efforts that may be needed to mobilise and ensure the meaningful
participation of all relevant stakeholders from developing countries, as well as
other stakeholders in the development field.
Drafting possible amendments to the ITU Constitution and Convention in order
to facilitate participation by relevant stakeholders.
Identifying the spheres of competence that member states reserve for themselves
with respect to WSIS stakeholders.
Considering the financial obligations and consequences arising from broader
participation of relevant stakeholders in ITU’s WSIS-related activities.
Nothing is included, however, on the need to bring ITU into line with ECOSOC
resolutions concerning the participation of NGOs, and the modalities that apply
across the UN system.
Insofar as participation by women is concerned, as mentioned earlier,
the Antalya Conference adopted Resolution 70 on “Gender mainstreaming in ITU and
promotion of gender equality towards all-inclusive information societies”. As well
as instructing the secretary-general to pursue gender mainstreaming policies and
practices within the ITU Secretariat, this resolution encourages member states
and sector members to review their own policies and practices to ensure that recruitment,
employment, training and advancement of women and men are undertaken on a fair
and equitable basis, and to facilitate the employment of women and men equally
in the telecommunications field.
5. Conclusions and recommendations
5.1 General conclusions
The Louder Voices report made a number of recommendations concerning
the actions that international ICT decision-making bodies could take to enhance
participation by developing country stakeholders, including governments, the private
sector and civil society. These included actions to increase:
- Awareness of issues
- Access to information
- Transparency of proceedings
- Participation by different stakeholders
- Capacity-building.
In the four years that have passed since Louder Voices was published,
and at least partly as a result of the WSIS, the ITU has improved its performance
in a number of these areas.
The WSIS process, which was originated and spearheaded by the ITU, succeeded
in raising awareness among developing country decision-makers of the links
between ICTs and development, as well as the importance of developing sound national
ICT policies and participating effectively in international ICT forums.
The ITU Secretariat – particularly the Strategy and Policy Unit (SPU) in the
secretary-general’s office and the BDT – has contributed to raising awareness and
to improving access to information on ICT issues by publishing well-documented,
readable reports on trends and developments in technology and regulation that include
assessments of the implications of these trends for developing countries. In addition,
these two units have made good use of the internet to provide online access to
these and other information resources.
However, unlike most other organisations – which provide free access to the
electronic versions of reports similar to the BDT’s World Telecommunication
Development Report and the SPU’s Internet Reports and World Information
Society Report – ITU policy still requires the costs associated with these
reports and other publications to be recovered from purchasers, thereby creating
potential barriers in access to information in developing countries and civil society
organisations.
The ITU Council agreed at its April 2006 session to make an at least temporary
exception to this rule when it decided to make ITU-T standards freely available
online on an experimental basis for one year, after which it will evaluate the
results. Although ITU-T standards are the ITU’s most valuable information product
in terms of sales revenues, the practice of charging for them is out of step with
the practice of many other standards organisations and potentially limits their
use, particularly by students and researchers, to the detriment of the ITU.
The ITU has also made use of web-based tools to somewhat improve the transparency
of proceedings for its own members by providing audiocasts and videocasts of
some of its meetings, including the Antalya Plenipotentiary Conference. However,
this is a limited transparency since webcasts are password protected and not available
to the general public.
In recent years the ITU has sought to widen the scope for participation by
members representing different stakeholders by eliminating restrictions that
prevented sector members from attending plenipotentiary and radiocommunication
conferences in their own right as observers, instead of as members of national
delegations. The 2006 Antalya Plenipotentiary Conference furthered this process
by consolidating and harmonising the detailed rules governing attendance and participation
by observers at ITU meetings across the three sectors, and by permitting sector
members to attend meetings of the Council and its committees and working groups
as observers.
Capacity-building has long been one of the core activities of ITU development
programmes, and symposiums, workshops, seminars, and training courses of varying
durations are one of the principal activities of the BDT today. In addition to
the technical capacity-building traditionally provided by the ITU, the BDT has
for a number of years sponsored an annual Global Symposium for Regulators and undertaken
other activities aimed at building regulatory capacity in developing countries,
such as the ICT Regulation Toolkit it sponsors in conjunction with the World Bank.
As well, as mentioned above, the Radiocommunication and Standardisation Bureaus
also undertake capacity-building activities related to their work programmes, while
the Strategic Planning Unit organises workshops and symposia under the secretary-general’s
New Initiatives Programme to provide information and analysis on emerging trends
and issues.
To date, these improvements have benefited mainly those who are already “members
of the club” – ITU member states, sector members and associates. They have been
of less benefit to members of the many other communities of interest that have
come to see telecommunications as a very important part of the process of linking
ICTs with development, and who consequently would like to have easier access to
the ITU and to be included in its deliberative processes.
The WSIS process fuelled this interest and heightened expectations that the
ITU would continue to build bridges between different stakeholders following the
summit’s successful conclusion. The past year, 2006, was the ITU’s first opportunity
to respond. So how did it do?
5.2 Conclusions on performance in relation to ICT roles and responsibilities
Taking a leadership role on behalf of the UN system in organising the WSIS and
implementing its results was a major step for the ITU – and quite out of keeping
with the organisation’s past practice, which has been to concentrate on its core
technical missions as much as possible while avoiding entanglement with contentious
policy/political issues of the kind that often preoccupy the United Nations, and
which were present to some degree in the WSIS process.
Having taken this risk and obtained a better result than many expected, ITU
member states were faced in 2006 with the question of “what next” in terms of both
the ITU’s role in building stronger linkages between ICTs and development through
the WSIS follow-up process and in reflecting the WSIS legacy of multi-stakeholder
engagement in its organisational structures and working methods.
Overall, the results of the Antalya Plenipotentiary Conference as expressed
in its Final Acts appear to indicate that ITU member states have agreed to incorporate
the results of the WSIS in their long-range plans and ongoing work programmes –
but that they do not intend to make major changes to organisational priorities
or resource allocations because of it. In particular, it is striking that Resolution
71, “Strategic plan for the Union, 2008-11”, makes only passing reference to the
WSIS, even in the section on the development sector, and that Decision 5, “Income
and expenditure for the Union for the period 2008 to 2011”, indicates that no additional
financial resources will be allocated to WSIS outcomes.
It is also noteworthy that various proposals to the Conference to expand the
ITU’s mandate to include ICTs as a whole were referred to the ITU Council for further
study. Likewise, as will be discussed in the following section, the Conference
decided to take a cautious approach to the question of enhancing civil society
participation in ITU activities, in terms of both process and scope.
While the overall results of Antalya suggest a somewhat “business as usual”
approach in which the ITU intends to fit the results of the WSIS into its activities
to the extent possible – rather than using these results to transform what it does
and how it is structured or operates – some of the decisions taken at the conference
appear to indicate a growing capacity of developing countries and regions to pursue
their agendas and advance their interests, at least with respect to some issues.
Building on the results of the WSIS process, it appears that a significant group
of developing countries and regions was able to put together and maintain a coalition
that not only determined the results of the elections for some of the key management
posts, but also shaped ITU strategy with respect to the potential impact of the
internet on international telecommunications policy and regulation, as expressed
in the resolutions discussed above.
Taken together, these internet-related resolutions appear to express a determination
on the part of a significant number of member states, primarily developing countries,
to ensure that the ITU and its member states play a larger role in a number of
different aspects of internet governance. The ultimate scope of these ambitions
may be evident when these internet-related resolutions are read in conjunction
with two other resolutions, which respectively call for a World Telecommunications
Policy Forum in 2009 to discuss the implications for international telecommunications
policy and regulation of convergence, the internet and NGNs, followed by a World
Conference on International Telecommunication in 2012 to review the International
Telecommunication Regulations in light of these implications. At the same time,
however, the way in which all of these resolutions are drafted also gives plenty
of scope for ITU member states that are less enthusiastic about gaining a greater
role in internet governance or enlarging the scope of telecommunication regulations
to pursue their agendas.
In sum, it appears that the debates that began during the WSIS process about
the ITU’s roles and responsibilities in relation to ICT and internet governance
are likely to continue for the next several years.
5.3 Conclusions on performance in relation to modalities and practices of participation
The ITU has made progress in recent years in increasing the total number of
non-governmental entities and organisations that participate in its work as sector
members and associates, as well as the number that come from developing countries
and regions. In addition, as mentioned above, it has improved the transparency
of its proceedings, at least within the organisation, by enhancing the rights of
sector members to participate in conferences and meetings, and by providing online
access to some events.
As described earlier, the ITU Secretariat has taken significant steps to make
better information available on the technical, regulatory, and policy issues facing
the organisation and its members. It has done this through reports such as the
annual World Telecommunications Development Report and the series of internet reports,
as well as through mechanisms such as the secretary-general’s New Initiatives Programme,
which sponsors workshops and seminars on emerging issues. In many cases, these
activities have been undertaken in partnership with entities, organisations and
other sources of expertise from outside the ITU. These actions and initiatives
have helped raise awareness of key issues within the organisation, provided members
with better information on matters requiring decisions, and contributed to capacity-building.
Some of this information has also been made available free of charge to non-ITU
members.
In spite of this progress, as noted in previous sections the ITU faces significant
challenges in seeking to live up to the standards and expectations for organisational
transparency and multi-stakeholder engagement created by the WSIS process – particularly
with respect to engagement with civil society.
As reported above, at the Antalya Plenipotentiary Conference ITU member states
recognised the benefits that such engagement could bring and launched a process
to study ways and means of enhancing participation through amendments to the existing
membership structure and increased use of informal mechanisms.
While this may indicate a new openness, it is important to note that this study
will be confined to WSIS-related activities, that it will be conducted by member
states, who will determine which stakeholders are relevant to these activities
and what spheres of competence will remain the exclusive preserve of member states,
and that the results will not be final until 2010.
5.4 Recommendations
The Antalya Plenipotentiary Conference clearly addressed the main issues facing
the ITU as a result of the WSIS, with respect both to its roles and responsibilities
in linking ICTs and the global development agenda, and to the challenges it faces
in engaging all relevant stakeholders more fully and effectively in its work. However,
it just as clearly addressed these issues by thinking “inside the box”, i.e., by
seeking to accommodate these issues within its established structures, working
methods and governance processes.
If the ITU’s experience over the past two decades in seeking to adapt to “the
changing telecommunications environment” is any guide, the results of this approach
are likely to be mixed at best. During this period of time, the ITU has made significant
progress in responding to the technical challenges and opportunities that have
arisen from the transformation of the telecommunications sector into a competitive
global business characterised by rapid innovation and the convergence of formerly
distinct networks and services. For much of this time, however, the ITU was much
less successful in responding to the development challenges and opportunities that
arose from these changes, and lost its policy leadership to other organisations
that represented new approaches to linking ICTs and development that were more
in tune with the times.
By systematically introducing multi-stakeholder approaches in all of the issue
areas that came under its purview, the WSIS potentially marks another turning point
in the evolution of global ICT and development policy. The ITU’s leadership role
in the WSIS follow-up process gives it an opportunity to give real and continuing
effect to the new objective that was added to the ITU Constitution in 1992: “to
promote, at the international level, the adoption of a broader approach to the
issues of telecommunications in the global information economy and society, by
cooperating with other world and regional intergovernmental organisations and those
non-governmental organisations concerned with telecommunications.” To do this,
however, it will likely have to think “outside the box” in relation to its organisational
structures, working methods and governance processes to a much greater degree than
was evident in the results of the Antalya Conference (McLean, 2003 and 2007 forthcoming).
As part of this process, ITU member states, sector members and associates who
support the goals of enhanced participation should find ways of reaching out to
stakeholders who are not currently ITU members, and should include them through
the various means available in the discussions and decision-making processes that
will take place during the next four years, for instance, through national consultations
or by including them in delegations to ITU meetings. For their part, stakeholders
with an interest in becoming involved in the work of the ITU should consider taking
the initiative of reaching out to the administrations of member states that are
likely to be sympathetic to their cause, as well as to sector members and associates,
to offer their expertise and support to the ITU reform process.
References
ITU (1984). The missing link. Report of the independent commission for world-wide
telecommunications development [online]. Available from: <www.itu.int>.
ITU (2002). Gender Mainstreaming in ITU. Resolution 70 [online]. Available
from: <www.itu.int>.
ITU (2003). Collection of the Basic Texts of the International Telecommunication
Union adopted by the Plenipotentiary Conference [online]. Geneva: ITU. Available
from: <www.itu.int>.
ITU (2006a). Doha Action Plan [online]. Available from: <www.itu.int>.
ITU (2006b). World Information Society Report 2006 [online]. Geneva:
ITU. Available from: <www.itu.int>.
ITU (2006c). Study of the participation of all relevant stakeholders in the
activities of the Union related to the World Summit on the Information Society
[online]. Available from: <www.itu.int>.
MacLean, D., Souter, D., Deane, J. and Lilley, S. (2002). Louder Voices:
Strengthening Developing Country Participation in International ICT-Decision Making
[online]. London: Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation and Panos London.
Available from: <www.cto.int>.
MacLean, D. (2003). “The Quest for Inclusive Governance of Global ICTs: Lessons
from the ITU in the Limits of National Sovereignty”. Information Technologies
and International Development [online], 1 (1), pp.1-18. Available from: <mitpressjournals.org>.
MacLean, D. (2007 forthcoming). “Sovereign Right and the Dynamics of Power in
the ITU: Lessons in the Quest for Inclusive Global Governance”. In Drake, W. and
Wilson, E. (Eds.), Governing Global Electronic Networks. Cambridge, MA:
MIT Press.
Footnotes
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[1] More information is available
at the ITU web site.
[2] There are a number of restrictions
built into the “free choice” system. For member states, only least-developed
countries (LDCs) can contribute at the one-sixteenth unit level. Sector members
of the Radiocommunication and Telecommunication Standardisation sectors must
contribute at least one half a unit, while Telecommunication Development sector
members can choose to contribute at the one-quarter, one-eighth or one-sixteenth
unit level. The fees for associates also differ by sector, being one sixth of
a sector member unit in the Radiocommunication and Standardisation sectors, one
twentieth in the Development Sector, and one fortieth for LDCs. For further details
see: <www.itu.int/members/pdf/membsership.pdf>.
[4] The ITRs were last amended
in 1988, at a time when telecommunications was beginning to be transformed by
the privatisation of state-owned operators and the introduction of competition
in both domestic and international markets. These trends have gathered strength
in the past two decades, during which time the internet and convergence have
also helped transform telecommunications worldwide, rendering the ITRs increasingly
obsolete. ITU members have long recognised that the ITRs no longer reflect the
realities of international telecommunications. However, successive reviews over
the past dozen years have been unable to achieve consensus on what action should
be taken. The 2006 Antalya Plenipotentiary Conference agreed to launch a new
review process to be completed by the time of the next plenipotentiary conference
in 2010, and to convene a WCIT in 2012 to consider the results of this review.
[6] The ITU has never implemented
ECOSOC Resolution 1296, adopted in May 1968 (or later revision), concerning recognition
of NGOs, although there was an effort by NGOs themselves to gain recognition
about a decade ago. See: <www.comunica.org/itu_ngo>.
[7] At the time, this body was
known as the Administrative Committee on Coordination.
[12] On the positive side, however,
the fact that about 20% of the national members of the radiocommunication and
standardisation sectors come from non-OECD countries may indicate that developing
countries and regions that are in transition and/or have begun to develop requisite
technical capacities are becoming increasingly engaged in the work of these sectors.
A longitudinal study would be required to confirm whether this is in fact the
case.