230 likes | 406 Views
Table of contents. Part 1Rationale for Parliamentary Committees on CommunicationRationale for HandbookPart 2ICTs for economic growth, development and social cohesionPart 3Establish of Standing ICT Parliamentary CommitteePerformance and evaluationPart 4 Sector developmentsPart 5Global
E N D
1. Handbook on Strengthening ICT Parliamentary Committees in SADC Parliaments Support to ICT Strategic Planning in the SADC Parliaments
Prof. Alison Gillwald
Windhoek, 28 July 2010
2. Table of contents Part 1
Rationale for Parliamentary Committees on Communication
Rationale for Handbook
Part 2
ICTs for economic growth, development and social cohesion
Part 3
Establish of Standing ICT Parliamentary Committee
Performance and evaluation
Part 4
Sector developments
Part 5
Global & regional governance
3. Rationale for Parliamentary Committees Rationale for Parliamentary Committee
Changing nature of governance in globalised world
Separation of power and delegations of powers to specialised fora and agencies to deal with complex and dynamic economic and social sectors.
Role of parliament in the institutional arrangements of sector.
4. Rationale of the handbook (1/2) Guide the Parliaments participation in the regional and national e-strategy processes for the development of an equitable information society and knowledge economy
Contribute to the shaping of the future information society in view of the WSIS implementation, follow-up and future 2015 review.
Challenges of convergence and NGN
Sector reform process and the role of Parliaments
5. Rationale of the handbook (2/2) Establishment of Parliamentary Committees
Legislative and oversight roles in the national and regional ICT policy and regulatory reform
Model committee (but separate form e-parliament task team) to demonstrate use of ICT in parliament
Strengthening ICT Parliamentary Committees
Capacity building, sector understanding
6. PART I ICTs in national, regional & continental development
7. ICT as a contribution to economic growth (macro) Linkages between ICT penetration and economic growth
Enabling role of ICT in enhancing delivery of other commercial services
2008 financial and economic crisis: challenges for governments
Scarcity of credit in the ICT sector
ICT backbone development for growth stimulation/economic recovery
8. ICT for development and social cohesion ICT as a contribution to development and social cohesion (macro)
ICT penetration and contribution to development
Human capital development at multiple levels education, training, professional
Enabling role of ICTs in health, government, education
9. Rationale for handbook It has been found that democracy by itself - elections and representative institutions does not necessarily produce justice and prosperity.
define the essential elements of good governance and generate measures of performance for the committee
10. PART II: Parliamentary ICT Committee
11. Establishment of ICT Parliamentary Committees Lead the political engagement in the national and regional e-strategy (Mandate and role)
From the institutional commitment (vision) on ICT in parliament towards:
an ICT policy and regulatory framework for convergence and NGN (Legislative process)
(i.e. representation, participation, transparency, accountability)
Oversight and management (Role and responsibilities)
From an e-strategy towards:
ICT policy and regulation: exercising scrutiny over the executive on international, regional and national ICT plans
12. The role of Parliament Oversight, legislative and management functions
Legislate, institutional oversight, monitoring and evaluation
Parliament in the institutional arrangements of the sector
Representation and accountability; participation, transparency
Institutional governance
(Parliament Government Regulator)
Constitution and administrative justice
Public participation
13. Approving and accounting for ICT budgets Public finance for innovation and economic growth
How to identify strategic and political ICT priorities?
Legislation to foster the deployment of a stable and robust telecommunication infrastructure; and encourage the adoption of alternative models that can significantly lower the cost of broadband to satisfy this emerging need of ICT.
Extending affordable Internet access to under-served areas, overcoming high prices of the bandwidth, in addition to the development of human resources and capacity building.
Fiscal policies/stimulus packages to finance NGN infrastructure roll-out
Tax cuts/reduction;
Government transfer payment
PPP
Public investment in ICT?
14. Strengthen ICT capacity development Training
Participation in international, regional meetings
Model committee for implementation of e-Parliament.
15. Global, regional governance ITU
ICANN
SADC Protocol on Transport, Meteorology, Telecommunications
SADC Model Law
Regional model regulations
16. Sector developments/primers
17. Uneven reform Background
First-phase reform (incorporation, national regulatory agencies, partial privatisation & liberalisation)
Second-phase reform: (greater liberalisation & competition regulation)
Third-phase reform: (convergence, NGN, next generation regulation.)
18. Regulation 3.0: new regulatory frameworks for NGN/NGR Central policy and regulatory issues in the NGN
Review universal access
Liberalisation of ICT markets: promoting competition
Public interventions for NGN roll-out:
Fiscal measures to incentivise high-speed IP-based networks
PPP: are we ready?
Competition & pricing
Licensing: technological neutrality & open access
Interconnection: termination rates
Spectrum: commons and auctions
Broadcasting reform
Social and economic costs of cybercrime
Freedom of expression and local content
Electronic security: Intellectual property rights, privacy
19. Performance Monitoring
20. Good governance Framework & Measurement surrounding governance context: relations between the state, the market and civil society; political space and support for active citizenship, and the impact of the global village.
parliamentary culture, the set of motivating and constraining beliefs and practices. What are the values and expectations associated with being a Member of Parliament? What is the relationship between leaders and followers?
the organizational capacity of parliament, including the strengths and weaknesses of the political and administrative sides of parliament.
Parliaments that Work, Parliamentary Centre & World Bank Institute
21. Performance criteria Financial Does committet operate according to acceptable standards of financial administration?.
Compliance Does Committee operate according to the laws of the land and its own rules and procedures?
Efficiency Does Committee organize itself and carry out its activities in ways that are reasonably efficient and dependable? Where this is not the case, the wider society, not to mention the executive, will dismiss parliament as chaotic and irrelevant.
Effectiveness Does the Committee have an impact on government and society
Relevance Does connect to the great issues of the day.
Sustainability - Does it have the resources, political and otherwise, to play its part in promoting good governance? These questions are meant to probe the history of the institution as well as its prospects for the future.
22. Structure of performance Inputs The raw materials of parliament, including MPs, staff and financial and other resources.
Activities This describes how MPs and staff spend their time in four main lines of activity. In the parliamentary chamber, committees, party caucuses and constituencies.
Outputs This refers to the products of parliamentary activity, notably debates, laws, resolutions, and reports and assistance to constituents.
Outcomes This refers to the direct effects of parliamentary activities on the outside world. Our framework focuses on outcomes in relation to three governance functionsaccountability, transparency and participation.
Impacts This refers to the longer term and more indirect influence of parliament on the set of good governance, specifically democracy, rule of law, clean and effective government and peaceful resolution of conflict.
23. For more information see