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Agenda. Information and communication technologies and IKCommunity structures for promoting IK systems in EthiopiaKnowledge Management and Indigenous Knowledge systemsBest practices around the world Conclusion.
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1. Information and Communication Technologies, Knowledge Management and Indigenous Knowledge Implications for Communities in Ethiopia
2. Agenda Information and communication technologies and IK
Community structures for promoting IK systems in Ethiopia
Knowledge Management and Indigenous Knowledge systems
Best practices around the world
Conclusion
3. What is indigenous knowledge? Profound, detailed and shared knowledge, beliefs and rules with regards to the physical resource, social norms, health, ecosystem, culture, livelihood of the people who interact with environment both in rural and urban settings
Knowledge that forms basis for local level decision making in agriculture, health care, food preparation, education, natural resource management, and a host of other activities
4. Indigenous knowledge Dynamic and evolved from years of experience and trial-and-error problem solving by groups of people working in their environments drawing upon resources they have at hand
Often shunned by modern scientific knowledge
5. What are some roles of the ICTs include telecommunications technologies such as telephony, cable, satellite and radio, as well as digital technologies, such as computers, information networks and software
ICTs
Enable capturing, storing and sharing of indigenous knowledge
Support the incorporation of indigenous knowledge with modern scientific and technical knowledge
Create easily accessible indigenous knowledge information systems
Promote integration of indigenous knowledge in formal and non-formal training
Provide a platform for advocating for improved benefit of the poor from their intellectual property rights and indigenous creators
6. Characteristics of IK that impact on ICTs IK is generated within communities
IK is location and culture specific
IK is part of the local ecosystem
IK covers human and animal life, primary production, natural resource management (basic needs)
Use of IK is cost-effective, sustainable and locally manageable
IK is dynamic , innovative, adaptive and open for experimentation
IK is oral and rural in nature
IK is not systematically documented
IK is not integrated into modern scientific and technical knowledge
7. Challenges in applying ICTs All IK does not require ICTs – can be captured on paper, books
Knowledge holder often do not volunteer their knowledge
IK databases and capturing process is laborious and time consuming
Significant unresolved intellectual property issues and challenges especially if the traditional knowledge leads to corporate gains
People who need IK may not have access to the technologies to make use of them
Those who read IK or access to databases are biased towards modern knowledge
Need to put in place and strengthen community structures that promote the flow of IK
8. Community Structures for IK - interface Recent practice focuses on the development of IK databases and encourage their use by target groups
The model was not successful in many cases
Important to encourage the flow and systematic gathering of IK through existing community structure such as “idir”, “iqub”, community resources centres, community libraries, etc.
Less high-tech approach to IK by focusing on index of what works, where to find and whom to contact
9. Role of Libraries and IRCs Collecting, preserving and disseminate indigenous and local traditional knowledge
Publicizing the value, contribution, and importance of indigenous and local traditional knowledge to both non-indigenous and indigenous peoples
Raising awareness on the protection of indigenous knowledge against exploitation
Involving elders and communities in the production of resources and teaching children to understand and appreciate the traditional knowledge
Encouraging the recognition of principles of intellectual property to ensure the proper protection and use of indigenous traditional knowledge and products derived from it.
10. Role of MPCCs Venue for ICT introduction to community
Platform for sharing digitized IK
Platform for trying new technologies and tools out
Community broadcasting can be used for exchange of IK
11. Role of Community Based Structures Community based social-capital structure such as “idir” and “iqub” have been platforms for exchange of IK
Can be used to capture and exchange knowledge or develop indices of IK on “what works” and “what does not”, who holds relevant knowledge and how to contact them in electronic and non-electronic formats
Form the basis of IK systems in Ethiopia
12. Example of Best Practices 1 Honey Bee Network
Gathered over 11,000 IK innovations in India
Provide venture funds to turn ideas and practices into product – enterprise development
Establish competition on recipes for women
Protection of intellectual property rights and rewarding innovators
Annual innovators meeting, market place
Promotion of changes into the educational systems
13. Example of Best Practice 2 Policy development in South Africa
IK policy approved by Cabinet in 2004
Covers aspects such as
Institutional and governance arrangement
Gathering and preserving IK
Networks and support mechanism for IK
Research and development
Intellectual property rights
14. Lesson for KM for Development 1 • Tacit knowledge - unconscious and intuitive knowledge gained through experience that allows individuals to make decisions without referring to rules or principles (e.g. knowing how to perform medical operations, knowing how to network at a conference);
• Explicit knowledge – that is articulated and accessible to anyone who reads, hears or looks at it (e.g. a training guide on using a software package or the conclusions of a policy briefing paper);
• Implicit knowledge helps individuals know what is socially and culturally appropriate in a given circumstance including shared beliefs, values and expectations (e.g. knowing that it is inappropriate to undermine colleagues in public, understanding management attitudes within a given organization)
Indigenous knowledge is mainly tacit/implicit. That makes is hard for capturing and exchange
15. Lesson from Km for development 2 Sharing knowledge is possible but that does not always translate into use for taking decisions, making informed actions and modifying behaviors in order to achieve development goals.
Effective knowledge sharing should not be imposed from outside but should be organic, learned and has to be embedded into work processes, local eco systems and livelihoods
Experiences from which most knowledge emerges, have local particularities like context, actors and processes. This limits the way local knowledge can be generalized and replicated in other settings
Valuable local knowledge is often not locally known nor socially recognized. This is partially constrained by myths, old paradigms, cultural idiosyncrasies and prejudices of professionals and institutions
The interaction between modern and traditional knowledge is desired but too complex to realize
16. Conclusions Focus on IK would help the poor to build on resources in which they are rich – knowledge
Ethiopia needs to embark on various steps
Create forums of institutions and networking among these
Research on mapping IK asset (medicinal plants), barriers, community and social structures
Strategies for identifying and document IK and institutional and support initiatives
National register on IK, rewarding innovators, integrating IK in educational systems
Capacity building in IK and knowledge management
IK policy based on developing country experiences
17. ‘Rabbit, where are you going?I am going to kill the Elephant (IK).Can you do that?Well, I’ll try, and try again.’ Tanzanian, Proverb…Thank you