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* Department for International Development Corporate report REVIEW OF DIGITAL IN DFID PROGRAMMES: SUMMARY Published 27 March 2015 This was published under the 2010 to 2015 Conservative and
Liberal Democrat coalition government CONTENTS * 1. Overview * 2. Key findings * 3. A new vision * 4. We are developing plans for greater action Print this page © Crown copyright 2015 This
publication is licensed under the terms of the Open Government Licence v3.0 except where otherwise stated. To view this licence, visit
nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3 or write to the Information Policy Team, The National Archives, Kew, London TW9 4DU, or email: [email protected].
Where we have identified any third party copyright information you will need to obtain permission from the copyright holders concerned. This publication is available at
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/dfid-review-of-digital-in-development-programmes/review-of-digital-in-dfid-programmes-summary 1. OVERVIEW The purpose of this review was to
benchmark DFID’s current activities on digital and to support the development of an overarching vision for our digital work in programmes. This informs a shared sense of where we should
focus our efforts both strategically and thematically. In Autumn 2014, we carried out a series of discussions with 35 interviewees (DFID staff and key partners) with the aim building a more
detailed picture of the use of digital in our programmes. Headline conclusion: Digital technologies can add value to our development interventions to help us reach greater numbers of poor
and marginalised people more quickly and cost-effectively – and there are some successful examples of this. However, there are also significant barriers to success, scale and replication. 2.
KEY FINDINGS * access to mobile/internet: Access to quality and affordable internet connection is a key barrier to success faced by the poorest and most marginalised. Access includes:
infrastructure (electricity, mobile network, internet connectivity), affordability, digital literacy (relevance and ease of comprehension of content and delivery), and government level
issues around regulation, intellectual property rights, standards and international co-operation * co-ordination and knowledge sharing: Despite significant investment in digital for
development interventions, knowledge is not being systematically shared across sectors and between donors and partners. This risks not getting the best value for money or the most effective
implementation through the reuse of successful interventions or common procurement. The lack of donor co-ordination in overcrowded sectors like mHealth could also be holding back
sustainability and scale up * capability: The varying levels of knowledge and experience amongst DFID staff, delivery partners, governments and regulators in exploiting the benefits offered
by digital is another key barrier to success. Issues include fear of risk, entrenched attitudes and behaviours, and misinformation 3. A NEW VISION We want to ensure the poorest and most
marginalised people in developing countries benefit from the added value digital can bring to our aid and development work. We intend to take advantage of the power of digital to have a
bigger, faster and cheaper impact on the lives of poor people - bringing solutions to scale so development products and services reach the poorest. Initial practical steps for 2015 * improve
the skills and confidence of DFID staff in programme design and encourage conversation around risk and failure, through our Year of Innovation and Learning and digital quiz follow up * turn
knowledge sharing grid into a working tool * continue allocating central resource and build a community of practice - a core hub for sharing knowledge, evidence, best practice, ideas and
connecting people and projects * improve co-ordination of programme planning, internally and with other donors – resulting in better procurement and re-use of proven interventions * identify
opportunities for DFID Leadership and Ministers to promote this agenda * become clear on our positions for overarching issues, ensuring these are reflected in the new cross-government
digital strategy, and lead on endorsing standards * embed knowledge of government spending controls across DFID, so that new programmes take advantage of experience and expertise from
colleagues and use the most appropriate solution to their problem - reusing existing technologies where appropriate 4. WE ARE DEVELOPING PLANS FOR GREATER ACTION * greater ambition on
connectivity – Coverage and access for the most marginalised. E.g. identifying what we can do to bridge the gap between the public and private sector, particularly on creating enabling
regulatory environments and exploring connectivity options such as spectrum in regional pilots * a global movement for collaboration – Bringing together private sector, governments, donors
and civil society. E.g. Mobilisation around embedding digital in the Sustainable Development Goals, connectivity and delivery and/or standards and measuring impact of digital * scaling up
our ambition around capability - Build on the best current individual initiatives and ideas. E.g. Fellowships, DWP Academy, Code Clubs. Explore Best of British support from: e.g. GDS, Ofcom
and UK government departments, and working with national country governments and regulators Back to top