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Best on Peacebuilding in the Information Age: Sifting Hype from Reality

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"Peacebuilding in the Information Age: Sifting Hype from Reality" ~ The ICT4Peace Foundation, in collaboration with the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University and Georgia Tech, is pleased to release, on the occasion of the anniversary of the devastating earthquake in Haiti, the first in a series of papers looking at the increasingly important role of information and communication technology (ICT) in conflict prevention, peacebuilding, peacekeeping and crisis response.

**Download the report here.

Michael Best is an editor of "Peacebuilding in the Information Age: Sifting Hype from Reality". Dr. Best is the Program Director for the Center for Strategy, Technology, and Policy (CISTP) Program on Information and Communications Technologies for Development (ICT4 Development). This program explores information and communication technologies (ICTs) - in particular the internet and mobile networks - in low-income and low-infrastructure countries and contexts. Dr. Best is also the Editor-in-Chief, Information Technologies & International Development.

This collection of thought provoking pieces includes esteemed writers such as former Finnish President and Nobel Peace Prize Winner Martti Athisaari, as well as a younger generation of cutting edge practitioners and scholars in this fast moving space. Unlike other papers on innovative technologies dealing with crisis response, reconstruction and humanitarian aid, this collection aims to encourage meaningful debate and action on how to solve the serious challenges that still exist in the effective use of ICTs.

Daniel Stauffacher (Co-Founder and Chairman of ICT4Peace Foundation) states, "There has been solid progress in improving the international community's response to crises through the effective use of innovative ICTs in crisis information management. However, there is still a long road ahead. In particular, we need to focus on how to extract and use verified information from crowdsourced data. The right mechanisms and tools for effective and coordinated crisis information management still need to be developed and refined."

Going beyond the current debate and positive hype about ICTs, these papers probe difficult questions and provides concrete recommendations concerning:

• the effectiveness of current systems of crisis information management;
• the need for a comprehensive assessment of the effectiveness of the use of ICTs in crisis response by the academic community;
• the need for better coordinative mechanisms amongst the key players, including the UN and its various agencies;
• the humanitarian responsibility of various actors, in particular new players such as crowdsourcing providers and social media;
• the serious challenges that still need to be overcome in terms of underlying political, hierarchical and traditional resistance to information-sharing amongst diverse organizations;
• the negative potential of ICTs in compromising the security of persons at risk in conflict situations;
• the lessons learned from the earthquake in Haiti on the use of new ICTs in disaster response situations and,
• the big picture of what this shift to an ICT-focused approach really means for existing humanitarian response systems.

Status

  • Workflow Status:Published
  • Created By:Jene Gladstone
  • Created:01/31/2011
  • Modified By:Fletcher Moore
  • Modified:10/07/2016