DESC walk


The Digital-Environment System Coalition (DESC)

Session 403

Thursday, 16 March 2023 16:00–18:30 (UTC+01:00) Special Session

Experiencing digital environment interactions in the "place" of Geneva

We experience things differently when we walk, when we talk together, and when we interact with the real physical environment.  We feel the fresh air on our faces, smell the vegetation, hear the noise of running water, and touch the rough rocks on the slopes.  We interact differently with each other.  We pause and contemplate where we are.  Our minds engage in ways that are so, so different from when we sit in large conference halls.

This session really is a walk - but with a difference.  It is being convened by the Digital-Evironment System Coalition (DESC) in advance of its more formal WSIS session (204) on the morning of Friday 17th, in part to explore the session themes in the physical environment and place of Geneva, but also to help get to know each other better and to build networks for working together in the future.  We will begin at 16.00 outside the main entrance to the CICG in Geneva, where there will be a short briefing before we  commence the walk.  Our precise route may be influenced by the weather (do dress accordingly), but the intention is that we will stop to discuss specific themes, each led by a member of DESC, at varying points on our journey:

  • Parc Mon Repos - the biosphere
  • Poste Filial - YouthDESC
  • Pont des Bergues - the hydrosphere
  • Ile Rousseau - the atmosphere
  • Auditoire de Calvin - the lithosphere

At each "place" we will consider and reflect on both the positive and the negative impacts that digital tech can have on one of the four main elements of our physical world, with a fifth stop being led by a member of YouthDESC to consider youth perspectives on these issues.

The walk is only about 4 kms in length and would take less than an hour if done directly, but with 15 minutes of discussion in each "place", and permitting some meandering on the way, we anticipate that we will conclude by 18.30.  Those who cannot join at the beginning are mopst welcome to find us on the way and join the conversation.

 


Prof Tim Unwin
Prof Tim Unwin Chairholder of the UNESCO Chair in ICT4D and Emeritus Professor of Geography Royal Holloway, University of London (United Kingdom) Moderator

Tim Unwin CMG is Chairholder of the UNESCO Chair in ICT4D and Emeritus Professor of Geography at Royal Holloway, University of London.  He was Secretary General of the Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation from 2011-2015, was Chair of the Commonwealth Scholarship Commission from 2009-2014, and over the last decade has worked closely with UN agencies such as the ITU, UNESCO and UNICEF. His influential edited book Information and Communication Technologies for Development, was published by CUP in 2009, and his latest book Reclaiming ICT4D was published by OUP in 2017.  His research focuses on the inequalities caused by the use of digital technologies.  In 2020 he led the production of a report on Education for the Most Marginalised post-COVID-19: Guidance for governments on the use of digital technologies in education funded by the World Bank and DFID, and in 2021 he launched the Digital-Environment System Coalition (DESC) to change global understanding of the impact of digital technologies on the physical environment.  He is an inspirational speaker, highly effective leader, and internationally respected author, with 16 books and more than 250 other publications to his credit. 


Paul Spiesberger
Paul Spiesberger Chair ICT4D.at ICT4D.at (Austria)

Paul Spiesberger has been the chairman of ICT4D.at since 2014 and in his spare time enjoys using his skills for the common good.  He is also a member of DESC.  He graduated as a computer scientist with a focus on media informatics from the Vienna University of Technology, where he is currently also doing his PhD.  He works with INSO (the Research Group for Industrial Software) as a researcher and lecturer in the field of mobile technologies and ICT4D. He is currently employed as a software developer for mobile technologies within a fast growing Austrian company.   He has won several national and international awards for his innovative work at Os – a collective to tackle social issues through the use of ICTs.


Tasfia Rahman
Tasfia Rahman Graduate Research Assistant University of Canberra (Australia)

A member of YouthDESC, Tasfia is a Graduate Research Assistant at the University of Canberra, with research interests in feminism, intersectionality and the capabilites approach in understanding the social impact of digital technologies.


Dr. Ahmed Imran
Dr. Ahmed Imran Assistant Professor, Information, Technology (IT) & Systems, and Director of RC-DISC University of Canberra (Australia)

Dr. Ahmed Imran (Information Systems researcher at the University of Canberra) is Leader of the Research Cluster for Digital Inequality and Social Change (RC-disc) and has special interests in the strategic use of IT, eGovernment, ICT4D and socio-cultural impacts of ICT.  He is also a member of DESC.  His current research includes IT innovation and design, child online protection, organizational/societal transformations through ICT, and the short- and long-term influence of IT in shaping the societies of the future. He has recently implemented an action design research project in Bangladesh funded by AusAID that has made a significant impact on the country’s capacity building in the area of e-government. He is also the Lead author of the textbook “eGovernment Management for developing countries”.


Topics
Cultural Diversity Digital Inclusion Education Environment Ethics Infrastructure
WSIS Action Lines
  • AL C6 logo C6. Enabling environment
  • AL C7 E–ENV logo C7. ICT applications: benefits in all aspects of life — E-environment
  • AL C7 E–AGR logo C7. ICT applications: benefits in all aspects of life — E-agriculture
  • AL C7 E–SCI logo C7. ICT applications: benefits in all aspects of life — E-science
  • AL C10 logo C10. Ethical dimensions of the Information Society
  • AL C11 logo C11. International and regional cooperation

This walk, together with Session 204, is about fundamentally reassessing the ways through which the design and use of digital tech interacts with the physical environment.  DESC's aims are to developing a holistic model of these interactions that examines both the positive and negative impacts of tech on the environment, going far beyond the current focus of attention largely on climate change.  It seeks ultimately to develop a new way of understanding these interactions that can mitigate the harms of digtal tech thus enabling its benefits to be experienced by all. 

It is therefore directly related to many of the Action Lines, but especially

C7 e-Environment - DESC explicitly addresses the physical environment in its totality
C7 e-Agriculture - agricultural production is one of the main ways through which humans engage with, and must sustain the physical environment
C7 e-Science - this initiative is driven by an interest in the highest possible quality of science to inform policy making and practice
C10 -there are profund ethical implications around our use and exploitation of the environment
C11 - these issues are global in scale, and require close internationbal and regional co-operation
C1 - all stakeholders need to be engaged
C2 - ICT infrastructures are one of the main means through which environmental harms are caused
C6 - interpreted broadly, the "enabling envuronment" is an integral dimension of the physical environment.

Sustainable Development Goals
  • Goal 7 logo Goal 7: Ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern energy for all
  • Goal 9 logo Goal 9: Build resilient infrastructure, promote sustainable industrialization and foster innovation
  • Goal 10 logo Goal 10: Reduce inequality within and among countries
  • Goal 11 logo Goal 11: Make cities inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable
  • Goal 12 logo Goal 12: Ensure sustainable consumption and production patterns
  • Goal 13 logo Goal 13: Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts
  • Goal 14 logo Goal 14: Conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine resources
  • Goal 15 logo Goal 15: Sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, halt and reverse land degradation, halt biodiversity loss
  • Goal 17 logo Goal 17: Revitalize the global partnership for sustainable development

DESC aims to provide a new way of considering the intersection of digital tech and the environment to be implemented post-Agenda 2030 and the SDGs.  It is built in part through a reconsideration of whether "sustainability" and the economic "growth" (development) agenda are indeed compatible.  It is therefore deeply concerned with all of the SDGs, but among the most important are:

7 - sustainable energy production and storage that does not harm the environment are essential - ICTs (as currently designed and implemented) are one of the main contributers to global energy demand.
9 - we need to have a refocusing of the entire digital tech sector so that it does indeed prpomote sustainable industrialization - this goes way beyond juyst reducing carbon emissions and e-waste
10 - inequalities are enhanced through the ways in which the ICT exploits the physical envuronment
11 - much emphasis has been placed on so-calloed "smart" cities - but their use of digital tech to achieve this is a yet further way throigh which urban dwellers exploit their rural brothers and sisters.
12 - the ICT sector is in many ways "unsustainable" as it is currently designed, with its emphasis on "fast fashion" and inbuilt cycles of planned obsolescene - production patterns need to change
13 - the global focus on the harms of climate change, and the emphasis of the digital tech sector mainly on reducing its carbon imprint has had zseriously adverse impoacts on other dimensions of the environment
14 - demand for rare earth minerals for use in digital tech is having a seriousley adverse impact oln the oceans, especially through deep sea mining (proposed and ongoing)
15 - DESC is exploring the extent to which desertification, land degradation and biodiversity loss are imopacted by digital tech,  While it is widely recognsed that digital tech can indeed be used to monitor and alleviate such environmental indicators, we need to know much more about their harmful contribution so that a balanced understanding can be achieved.
17 - DESC can only achieve its ambitious aims through a completely revitalized global partnership based on a comprehensive understanding of the balance between positive and negative aspects of digital tech.

Links

DESC is a bottom-up coalition, involving many partners, researchers and practitioners.

The DESC site can be accessed at http://desc.global or https://ict4d.org.uk/DESC

The lead partners involved for this session are:

  • UNESCO Chair in ICT4D, Royal Holloway, University of London https://ict4d.org.uk
  • INIT (the Inter-Islamic Network on IT) http://www.init.org.pk/
  • WWRF (Wireless World Research Forum) https://wwrf.ch/
  • ICT4D.AT https://www.ict4d.at/
  • RC-DISC (the Research Cluster for Digital Inequality and Social Change at the University of Canberra) https://www.canberra.edu.au/about-uc/faculties/SciTech/research/rc-disc