United Nations Development Programme (UNDP):
www.sdnp.undp.org/it4dev/
United Nations Economic Commission for Africa - Bridging the
Information Gap in Africa www.uneca.org/programmes_home.htm
United Nations Information Technology Service (UNITeS)
http://www.unites.org (you can also see the
archived version of the United Nations Technology Service
(UNITeS) web site here)
USAID Leland Initiative - www.usaid.gov/regions/afr/leland
World Bank Development Gateway - www.development.gateway.org
World Bank Global Development Learning Network -
www.worldbank.org/gdln/
World Bank infoDev - www.infodev.org
World Intellectual Property Organization -
ecommerce.wipo.int/index-eng.htm
On a related note:
Early
History of Nonprofits & the Internet
The Internet has been about people and organizations networking
with each other, sharing ideas and comments, and collaborating
online. It has always been interactive and dynamic. And
there were many nonprofit organizations who "got" it early --
earlier than many for-profit companies. So I've attempted to set
the record straight: I've prepared a web page that talks about
the
early history of nonprofits and the Internet. It focuses
on 1995 and previous years. It talks a little about what
nonprofits were using the cyberspace for as well at that time
and lists the names of key people and organizations who helped
get nonprofit organizations using the Internet in substantial
numbers in 1995 and before. Edits and additions are welcomed.
Also see:
The Last Virtual Volunteering Guidebook
available
for purchase as a paperback & an ebook
from Energize,
Inc.
Completely revised and updated, &
includes lots more advice about microvolunteering!
Published January 2014.
Various United
Nations offices have launched initiatives to promote the use
of computers, feature phones, smart phones and various
networked devices in development and humanitarian
activities, to promote digital literacy and equitable access
to the "information society," and to bridge the digital
divide. This web page is my effort to track UN Tech4Good /
ICT4D programs, from the oldest through 2016. My goal is to
primarily to help researchers, as well as to remind current
UN initiatives that much work regarding ICT4D has been done
by various UN employees, consultants and volunteers for more
than 15 years (and perhaps longer?).
- Tech
Volunteer Groups / ICT4D Volunteers
A listing of organizations and groups that promoted and
placed tech volunteers - both defunct initiatives and
current ones.
- San Francisco Women
of the Web (SFWOW): A History
In the 1990s, various associations sprung up all over
the USA to support women using the Internet as a primary
part of their work - or who wanted to. These
associations created safe, supportive, content-rich, fun
spaces, both online and in real spaces, for women to
talk about their tech and online-related work, to ask
questions, and to learn from each other. One of the best
well-known at the time, San Francisco Women of the Web,
chose 25 women in 1998, in 1999, in 2000 and in 2001,
recognizing them with their Women of the Web award. To
help highlight some of the many women who played
important roles in the 1990s Internet - which I consider
the "early days" - as well as some truly pioneering tech
projects that laid the groundwork for the success of so
many initiatives today, I have reproduced this list of
Top25 Women on the Web on my own site.
- Short-term
Assignments for Tech Volunteers
There are a variety of ways for mission-based
organizations to involve volunteers to help with short-term
projects relating to computers and the Internet,
and short-term assignments are what are sought after
most by potential "tech" volunteers. But there is a
disconnect: most organizations have trouble identifying
such short-term projects. This is a list of short-term
projects for "tech" volunteers -- assignments that might
takes days, weeks or just a couple of months to
complete.
- One(-ish)
Day "Tech" Activities for Volunteers
Volunteers are getting together for intense, one-day
events, or events of just a few days, to build web
pages, to write code, to edit Wikipedia pages, and more.
These are gatherings of onsite volunteers, where
everyone is in one location, together, to do an
online-related project in one day, or a few days. It's a
form of episodic volunteering, because volunteers don't
have to make an ongoing commitment - they can come to
the event, contribute their services, and then leave and
never volunteer again. Because computers are involved,
these events are sometimes called hackathons, even if
coding isn't involved. This page provides advice on how
to put together a one-day event, or just-a-few-days-of
activity, for a group of tech volunteers onsite, working
together, for a nonprofit, non-governmental organization
(NGO), community-focused government program, school or
other mission-based organization - or association of
such.
- Early
History of Nonprofits & the Internet
The Internet has been about people and organizations
networking with each other, sharing ideas and comments,
and collaborating online. It has always been
interactive and dynamic. And there were many nonprofit
organizations who "got" it early -- earlier than many
for-profit companies. So I've attempted to set the
record straight: I've prepared a web page that talks
about the
early history of nonprofits and the Internet. It
focuses on 1995 and previous years. It talks a little
about what nonprofits were using the cyberspace for as
well at that time and lists the names of key people and
organizations who helped get nonprofit organizations
using the Internet in substantial numbers in 1995 and
before. Edits and additions are welcomed.
- Volunteering
Abroad (especially for Westerners)
An in-depth look at the different kinds of volunteering
abroad, with extensive information on what a person
would need to do and study to become a viable candidate
for long-term volunteering gigs where the volunteer does
NOT have to pay his or her own travel and
accommodations, such as the PeaceCorps or UNV.
- Incorporating
virtual volunteering into a corporate employee
volunteer program (a resource for businesses /
for-profit companies)
Virtual volunteering - volunteers providing service via
a computer, smart phone, tablet or other networked
advice - presents a great opportunity for companies to
expand their employee philanthropic offerings. Through
virtual volunteering, some employees will choose to help
organizations online that they are already helping
onsite. Other employees who are unable to volunteer
onsite at a nonprofit or school will choose to volunteer
online because of the convenience.
- Women's
Access to Public Internet Access, a resource
I developed through research & experience to support
the development of women-only Internet
centers/technology centers/etc., or women-only hours at
such public Internet access points, in developing and
transitional countries.
- Lessons from
onlinevolunteering.org
Some key learnings from directing the UN's Online
Volunteering service from February 2001 to February
2005, including support materials for those using the
service to host online volunteers.