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111/1999 17
November 1999
ABA
Deputy Chairman elected vice chairman of UNESCO's
Communications Commission 5
Mr
Gareth Grainger, Deputy Chairman of the
Australian Broadcasting Authority, has been
unanimously elected Vice Chairman of Commission 5
on Communications, Information and Informatics at
UNESCOs 30th General Conference in Paris.
Mr
Grainger is also Chairman of the Communications
Network of the Australian National Commission for
UNESCO.
While
at the General Conference, Mr Grainger made an
intervention proposing strategies for
UNESCOs involvement in the communications
and information sectors in the coming decade. In
making the intervention, Mr Grainger drew on the
conclusions of a number of forums concerning
regulatory policy in the communications and
information sectors.
Mr
Grainger proposed that UNESCO should consider
moving to a more devolved and regionalised mode
of operation in the communications and
information sectors.
"In
this way, UNESCO could play a real role and make
a worthwhile contribution to ensuring that its
work reflects the priorities of its member
countries and facilitates the cross-cultural
exchanges that need to occur in a global
communications and information environment,"
Mr Grainger said.
At
the General Conference Mr Grainger was also
invited to be one of five international experts
participating in a world panel on social, ethical
and legal issues of cyberspace. Mr Grainger
identified four main areas that UNESCO should
move forward on the Internet: access, education,
information dissemination and content creation.
"It
is important for UNESCO to find industry and
community partners in this sector and work with
them in promoting international consensus about
Internet access and governance," said Mr
Grainger.
BACKGROUNDER
Over
the past year, Mr Grainger, as Chairman of the
Communications Network of the Australian National
Commission for UNESCO, has been invited to be a
keynote speaker in a number of forums on issues
concerning regulatory policy in the
communications and information sectors.
In
making his intervention at the General
Conference, Mr Grainger drew on the main
conclusions of some of those forums and proposed
strategies for UNESCOs involvement in the
communications and information sectors in the
coming decade.
Mr
Grainger has proposed that UNESCO regional
offices work closely with National Commissions to
develop regional communications and information
plans that would draw on a wide network of public
and private sector operators. He envisages the
UNESCO secretariat focusing its activities on the
coordination and interconnectivity of those
regional processes, and their distillation into a
few big picture projects and initiatives that
would provide an appropriate level of global
vision.
In
March this year, Mr Grainger chaired the
Asia-Pacific Internet Conference. The conference
was convened by the ABA, with support from UNESCO
and AusAID. Many of the 16 countries that
attended this conference expressed concern about
access and they saw international collaborative
efforts as insignificant when technology is
developing rapidly and information proliferates
through new media. In such an environment, these
countries considered it would still be some time
before their communities would have access to
basic communications systems, let alone new
services such as the Internet.
"I
believe UNESCO should be placing most emphasis on
access to communications and information,"
said Mr Grainger. "It should be asking how
the opportunities of the so-called information
age could be made available and relevant to the
widest number of people in the world,
particularly those in rural and remote
areas."
While
he sees it as clearly within UNESCOs
charter to address the protection of children
from inappropriate content on communications
services, Mr Grainger considers this work to be
more appropriate for other forums in which the
private sector is playing a prominent leadership
role. These include the Global Business Dialogue
and the Bertelsmann Foundations process on
Self-Regulation of Internet Content.
"UNESCO
cannot expect to be a leader in this field",
Mr Grainger said. "However, it can play a
useful role documenting the developments that
occur as part of the process of achieving
international consensus, and in disseminating
this information in its member countries."
Mr
Grainger sees a role for UNESCO in supporting the
growing global network of hotlines for dealing
with inappropriate content on the Internet. In
this role, UNESCO would work in association with
other organisations such as the European
Commission and INHOPE. Once again he considers it
a matter best pursued as a regional initiative so
that there is a greater sense of ownership and
relevance to individual countries, as in the
final analysis, it would be national parliaments
that decide on policy and laws for their own
countries.
Mr
Grainger concluded his intervention by appealing
for strong support from UNESCOs Regular
Budget and from the Participation Program budget
for Australias important initiative, the
International Conference on Youth and Media
Research, to be held in Sydney in November 2000.
He also called for support for the conference for
young people from the Asia-Pacific region that
would be held soon after.
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