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PRESS
RELEASE:
MSU
PROMOTING WOMEN'S POLITICAL LEADERSHIP IN WEST AFRICA
With
a new State Department-funded initiative, Michigan State University
(MSU) is "Promoting Women's Political Leadership in West Africa:
The Internet and Skills for Democracy." This two-year project
reflects MSU's conviction that the Internet has a unique ability
to make information available quickly, easily, and on an interactive
basis that can enhance civic participation, and political and governance
skills in new and exciting ways. The Internet can be key to building
and strengthening sustainable democracies worldwide and especially
in Africa. The project also reflects MSU's commitment to increasing
equity for women in the economy and society.
With
a grant from the U.S. State Department's Office of Citizen's Exchange
in the Bureau of Education and Cultural Affairs, MSU will extend
its African Internet Connectivity initiative through a joint project
of the Matrix: The Center for Humane Arts, Letters and Social Sciences
Online and the African Studies Center. The project will focus on
training for women in Ghana, Nigeria, Senegal, and Mali, capacitating
elected officials, candidates, and leaders of non-governmental organizations
(NGOs) in using and developing Internet tools to meet some of the
most pressing needs facing their countries and communities.
"By providing access to online technologies, this program will
enhance West African women's rights and opportunities to limit both
the digital divide between men and women, as well as the persistent
inequalities between first world and developing nations," said
Professor Mark Kornbluh, Director of MATRIX, "We know from
experience that electronic networks can be a critical means of facilitating
exchange between individuals with like interests who are separated
by distance and national divides. If we can empower these women
leaders to use the Internet to build ties with their constituents
and colleagues, both in their own communities and abroad, we can
contribute significantly to strengthening democracy in each of these
African countries as well as our own." According to Stella
D'Orgu, previous program participant and Head of the Commission
on Integrated Gender Empowerment, Nigeria, "
the benefit
of establishing contacts with other women in so many other countries
is invaluable. The interactions with others also reinforces one's
own work, and one picks up new tips to improve results. The Internet
serves as a means for reaching out to potential volunteers, and
also for contacting other women working in similar fields, and thereby
motivating each other."
In
May 2002, a group of politically-active women from each of the four
West African countries will attend a three-week training workshop
at MSU and Washington, D.C. "In addition to intensive Internet
training, the group will participate in a range of seminars on women's
political participation and leadership skills and will meet with
political leaders from across Michigan and Washington, D.C.,"
noted Professor David Wiley, Director of the MSU African Studies
Center. "Fostering partnerships and exchange among an international
community of women leaders both in the U.S. and among the participating
countries is a central goal of this initiative." Lisa Fine,
Professor of Women's Political History at MSU added, "the project
not only brings West African women activists, politicians, academics,
journalists and intellectuals to learn how to use the internet for
their own work, but also to share, instruct and learn with like-minded
women in the United States."
After the May workshop, MSU teams will travel to Ghana, Nigeria,
Senegal, and Mali to work with the trainees to conduct follow-up
training sessions and build further networks among women in the
four countries. These in-country workshops will include practical
skills for meeting the responsibilities and expectations of accountability
of elective office, campaign management, polling, voter outreach,
and message development for political candidates, and activities
to enhance the participation of women in the electoral process and
civic involvement, both locally and nationally.
Promoting
Women's Political Leadership in West Africa is the second phase
of a continuing family of projects at MSU to build capacity, human,
research and educational resources in African institutions and communities.
Since 1996, MSU has hosted delegations of academics, archivists
and librarians, teachers, journalists, human rights activists, political
leaders, and cultural heritage workers from across across West and
Southern Africa with support from the State Department's Office
of Citizen Exchange. This initiative also will build on an earlier
two-year initiative to strengthen women's democratic organizing
in West Africa that concluded in May 2001.
Partners
in this initiative include: MATRIX: The Center for Humane Arts,
Letters and Social Sciences Online, the MSU African Studies Center,
Women and International Development, and the MSU College of Arts
and Letters.
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