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This report is based on the outcomes of a regional workers' education training workshop held at the Tom Mboya Labour College, Kisumu, Kenya and organized by the Bureau for Workers' Activities of the International Labour Organization and the Workers' Activities Programme of the International Training Centre in Turin. The aim was to trade unions in English-speaking Africa to bridge what has been described as the Digital Divide: the gap between developed and developing countries in the use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT). One important outcome of the workshop was that, the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This report is based on the outcomes of a regional workers' education training workshop held at the Tom Mboya Labour College, Kisumu, Kenya and organized by the Bureau for Workers' Activities of the International Labour Organization and the Workers' Activities Programme of the International Training Centre in Turin. The aim was to trade unions in English-speaking Africa to bridge what has been described as the Digital Divide: the gap between developed and developing countries in the use of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT). One important outcome of the workshop was that, the bridge of the digital divide will only be shortened if trade unions design and co-ordinate the ICT agenda at the workplaces. The conventional wisdom must be that information technology must be seen to be important for all trade union operations, ranging from membership recruitment and organising, delivery of services, collective bargaining, research, training and education, to political campaigns and maintenance of democratic principles. Trade unions must also take information technology as a critical force in shaping their relevance in the future.
Autorenporträt
Mohammed Mwamadzingo is the senior economist at the Bureau for Workers¿ Activities, International Labour Office, Geneva. While in ILO he has been based in Abidjan, Addis Ababa, Harare, and Pretoria. He has a Bachelors¿ and Masters¿ degrees from the University of Nairobi and a Doctor of Philosophy degree from the University of Sussex.