The report launched by the Web Foundation on Women’s Rights Online: closing the digital gender gap for a more equal world is a blessing in the digital equality debates. This report comes during unprecedented times when the world is still grappling with a global health crisis which has forced billions of people across the globe and services to move online. The pandemic has quickened the urgency with which the internet should be viewed as a lifeline rather than a luxury. Therefore, this report is a great resource which, through evidence-based research puts into context issues surrounding gender digital divide especially in Low Developed Countries (LDCs). It provides a global picture of the current digital gender inequalities and shows the barriers that women face in accessing and using the internet.

Across the globe, fewer women than men use the internet and research from the Web Foundation found that globally men are 21 per cent more likely to be online than women. This gap increases to 52 per cent in Least Developed Countries (LDCs) and keeps widening. This reality is worrying because if no appropriate measures are taken to achieve gender digital equality, women and girls are likely to miss out on the economic and social opportunities that the internet offers. Evidence from the survey of four countries across three regions including Uganda found multiple barriers to internet access.

Affordability of data emerged as one of the biggest obstacles to women and girls getting and staying online. Putting this hinderance into the Ugandan context is the example of the social media tax, a regressive tax that requires all Ugandans irrespective of their economic status to pay a daily tax of UGX 200 in order to use social media. These “one shoe fits all” kind of regulations are excluding many low-income earners especially women from getting online. This partly explains why the report findings show that Uganda still has the lowest level of internet access from all the four countries surveyed, with a substantial gender digital gap of 42 per cent. This calls for government to focus its efforts on getting more women and girls online because closing the gender digital gap has positive socio-economic implications for achieving Vision 2040 and the third National Development Plan (NDP III). To solve this barrier, governments and companies are called upon to reduce taxes on low-cost devices and give subsidies for those less able to buy especially women.

Lack of digital skills among women and girls is another hindering factor highlighted in the report, 50 per cent of the rural women interviewed attributed their being offline to failure to use the internet while in the urban areas 45 per cent of women said the same. It should be noted that women are excluded from ICTs right from the design level when ICTs are built with a bias towards male perspectives and because majority of women fail to associate with the finished products, they choose to keep away from technology. In order to overcome this barrier, the Web Foundation urges governments and companies to collect and publish gender data in the technology sector and to invest in promoting digital skills and ICT education for women and girls.

In addition to the above, the report also found that women create less online content as compared to their male counterparts. The women that are online are less likely to create certain types of content, for example, the statistics in the report show that men are 29 per cent more likely than women to comment on social, economic and political issues and that they are 29 per cent more likely to sell or advertise a product or service online. To solve this gender digital equality hinderance, governments and companies are called upon to support and empower more women and girls to participate in technology development, local content creation and ICT innovation. This they can do

The report further highlights issues on online privacy and data protection, findings indicate that women are more concerned about their online privacy than men. This is due to the fact that oftentimes women and girls are targets of online gender-based violence and other forms of online abuse. Few countries have regulations in place to hold the perpetrators of these online crimes accountable, in fact for Uganda’s case, the law castigates the victims of online abuse by placing the burden on them to prove their innocence. For example, when a woman’s non-consensual intimate images are released online without her consent, the law does not protect such people and this gap in the regulations has allowed this vice to continue. Governments and technology companies should work together to safeguard the online privacy of women and girls. And as more women and girls get online, it is important that they find the internet a safer and more empowering space where their rights are respected.

In conclusion therefore, although this research finds promising results on basic internet access, this still falls short of the meaningful connectivity standards recommended by the Alliance for Affordable Internet for unlocking the full power of internet access. Until we get everyone connected and enjoying the benefits that the internet offers, the internet as a magnifier for equality will remain a myth. Closing the gender digital gap requires that governments and technology companies understand the ways that women and girls are prevented from fully accessing and using digital technologies. This research is a great source of relevant information for ICT policy makers, digital rights advocacy groups and the private sector as they work together in closing the digital gender gap and creating a more equal world.

By

Patricia Namakula & Nsekanabo Sheila

Patricia Namakula works as Director of Research and Public Relations at the Centre for Multilateral Affairs (CfMA) with particular oversight on all CfMA’s research and communications projects. She specializes in international relations, communications, and public policy analysis. She is very passionate about promoting human rights in the digital spaces.

Nsekanabo Sheila is working as the Policy and Strategy Manager at the Centre for Multilateral Affairs (CfMA). She leads the development and implementation of policy research and analysis strategies, oversees and participates in the development of reports, surveys and briefings while engaging policy makers at National, Regional and Global levels

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