top of page
  • Writer's pictureAmplio

Q&A: Addressing the Gender Digital Divide in Sustainable Development

Updated: Aug 8, 2022



A Q&A with Revi Sterling, Director of USAID’s WomenConnect Challenge


Revi Sterling, director of USAID’s WomenConnect Challenge, says the gender digital divide is growing yet women are absolutely the key to sustainable development. This Q&A is the first of a two-part series with Revi. Check out part two here.


Women + Tech as a Great Force Multiplier 


Amplio:  According to the World Bank, more than 80 percent of digital development projects fail. What is happening? 


Revi Sterling:  The research points the blame squarely at not addressing what Richard Heeks calls the “design-reality gap”—we are not creating tech that is well-designed for its intended users. For me, it comes down to the fact that we’re not looking at women’s development needs. When we talk about the most vulnerable people in the world, women are the largest chunk of that population.


Women are the ones who have the least agency to do things in their community, and the least access to information. They have the highest numbers of illiteracy and the lowest numbers of land rights. And yet we have 60 years of qualitative and quantitative data to say that women are absolutely the key to sustainable development. You would think that women plus technology would be this great force multiplier and we would have hit all the UN Sustainable Development Goals by now. But so many digital development programs are too tech-centric, which is my big complaint.


I come from the tech industry, so I can say that with some authority and damnation.


When I was working on my own hardware platform that wasn’t a Talking Book—and it’s probably a good thing that it failed—people kept saying, “Just make it a cell phone.” I’m sure Amplio has also heard this a few times. Well, let me tell you, every woman in the world who is able to own a mobile phone, has one. But one billion women don’t. Moreover, the persistent gender digital divide is reinforcing, and even exacerbating, existing socioeconomic gaps between men and women.


We have 60 years of qualitative and quantitative data to say that women are absolutely the key to sustainable development. So, you would think that women plus technology would be this great force multiplier—and we would have hit all the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals by now. 

The Problem With Mobile Phones


Amplio:  What is stopping one-billion-plus women from using cell phones? 


Revi Sterling:  I have worked on so many projects where women risk violence, jail, even death when they use technology. They would get spam messages or a hang-up call, and their family or husband would look through the phone at the end of the day and ask, “What is this?” The woman would say, “I don’t know.” And they would say, “Well, it’s not a known number. Ergo, it could be from a man. Ergo, you must be having an affair.”


This is the kind of thing that happens all over the world—there are whole swaths of the community who want to keep women offline and controlled. That’s where the opportunity for change is.


The mobile phone issue isn’t just that women don’t have phones to take Snapchat pictures with. It’s the fact that this can get to be a very deadly situation in development. That’s not the norm in a lot of communities, but more so, what I’m seeing is a backlash against technology as the world becomes more populous and a little scarier. 


Revi’s “doom and gloom” slide shows how cell phones can put women at risk.

There is a widespread fear of women being harassed online, so we hear ‘let’s just not let them on.’ When you batten down the hatches, you have more restrictive social norms, more restrictive cultural barriers, especially when things feel out of control. And this is a pretty out-of-control time, from climate change to mass migration.


The Gender Digital Divide in Education


Amplio: In your opinion, what should schools and education systems be doing to address the gender digital divide?  


Revi:  In the U.S., most education systems seem to understand how to address the gender digital divide. However, it’s a matter of working with under-resourced schools and school boards that are not future-forward. In the rest of the world, socio-economic and geographic realities dictate if and where ICT and STEM-type education is available, and whether girls have access. What do you do with rural schools if teachers are entirely absent, or in communities where education isn’t available to girls?


There are bigger issues that we have to address around education. Some can be addressed through technology, but the failures in tech-based education make districts wary. Most efforts have been unsustainable. Priorities change with elections. Schools that don’t even have desks or latrines are hardly suitable for tech infrastructure, which requires climate control, electricity, and security.


I hold more hope for informal educational opportunities, such as health and agriculture digital development programs with an educational component, mobile training centers, offline content, and other offerings that demonstrate more promise for reaching more students, especially women and girls.


 

Revi Sterling is a technology and gender expert who consults globally on using technology to empower women and girls. She's also an Amplio board member.


Connect with Revi on LinkedIn.


See also:




bottom of page