Who are we?
The African Centre for Women, Information and Communications
Technology is a pioneer Kenyan based Information and Communications
Technology for Development (ICT4D) Organization with a regional
reach whose mission is to promote women’s access to
and use of ICTs as tools for social, economic and political
advancement.
Founded in 1998 and registered in 2001, ACWICT dedicates
its efforts to providing a One-Stop ICT solution linking
the social, economic and political needs of rural women
by empowering them to make a difference to their lives and
the lives of their significant others. This enables them
to address their needs concerning food security, education,
governance, conflict, peace building, entrepreneurship and
Trade, and health.
Over the years, ACWICT has created a niche for herself in
providing innovative ways to using ICT as tools for further
development, with a bias towards women and other marginalized
groups; integrating a gendered approach to ICT4D; linking
private sector to the development arena; linking women beneficiaries
of ICT4D to fiscal and technical resources; and results
based management.
Over and above its capacity to integrate ICT across various
disciplines such as agriculture, governance, education,
health, trade and entrepreneurship, ACWICT collaborates
with the government, private sector NGOs, Community Based
Organizations and international development partners who
share a common goal of creating a better livelihood for
women in Africa.
Information and Communications Technologies (ICTs) have
become a potent force in transforming social, economic and
political lives of women globally. Their ability to overcome
traditional barriers of location, distance, volume, time
and medium in service delivery and to provide equal spaces
for participation at national, regional and global levels
has provided an unchallenged opportunity for ending isolation
of the worlds most poor and marginalised women; and giving
them a voice and visibility on the global platform.
Unlike in the past few years when many critics dismissed
the issue of ICTs and gender as a development agenda because
of more pressing needs that women in developing countries
have for safe water, adequate food, improved health and
better education, it is now more widely accepted that health,
water, food and ICT are not in opposition with each other
in the drive to empower women in developing countries. They
are all needed. As Nancy Hafkin and Nancy Taggart have put
it, "simply ending the isolation that women face
in rural as well as urban areas through improved communications
will go a long way towards promoting economic, political
and social growth, and eliminating poverty".
ICTs can facilitate women's access to production techniques
and technologies for increasing yields; increase economic
returns through primary processing of commodities or improving
quality of artisanal products; contribute to women's economic
status by supporting access to distant markets through electronic
commerce. In the political sphere, ICTs can contribute to
political empowerment of women as tools for networking to
perform social and political advocacy to strengthen women's
participation in the political process and to improve the
performance of elected women officials as well as women's
access to the government and its services. ICTs can also
facilitate women's access to improved health and education
facilities through tele-medicine and distant learning.
With the forces of globalization shaping the world into
one village and one economy and ICTs being the driving force
of globalization, access to, use, application, production
and control of ICTs by women is no longer a choice or a
luxury but a precondition to participation in the emerging
global information society and economy.
Although ICTs present a unique and powerful tool for accessing
and disseminating information and knowledge necessary for
advancement of women, there exists a broad concern on the
growing gap in knowledge and information between those who
are accessible to the technology and those who are not.
Majority of those who are not are women who are already
experiencing difficulties in gaining access to traditional
resources in their countries. A series of factors, including
low literacy and education, language barriers, time, cost
of access, geographical location of facilities, lack of
ICT literacy skills, social-cultural norms, non gender responsive
ICT policies, lack of privacy and security and a general
lack of awareness on the opportunities brought by ICTs and
the Information and Communication Technology for Development
(ICT4D) agenda in general constrain women's access to and
control over ICTs.
ACWICT’s programs are designed to be highly flexible
and scalable. The programs can support scaling-up by supporting
creation of additional community technology learning centres,
identifying additional thematic areas, specifying age groups,
and entrepreneurial activities, technologies [ICTs] adopted,
training modules, numbers of people, income levels and geographical
coverage amongst others.
ACWICT provides visibility for her partners through community,
national, regional and global platforms. At the community
level, ACWICT achieves this through community open days.
At national, regional and global levels ACWICT participates
in platforms such as international women days, world telecommunications
day, African telecommunications day, UN Commission for the
Status of Women, World Social Forum among others. |