St. John's News
St. John's University College of Professional Studies Successfully Completes Three-Day Conference in Goa, India
January 10, 2007
Goa, India – St. John’s University’s College of Professional
Studies hosted a three-day conference "Information and
Communications Technologies and Development" in Panjim, Goa, India
this past weekend in an effort to increase public discourse
regarding Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) and how
they can be used for holistic development. Other parties helping to
organize the forum were: the Diocesan Centre for Social
Communications Media of Goa and Daman and
St. John’s Division of Mass Communications.
“We hope that many of the ideas presented at the conference will
become seeds from which future wisdom may someday grow,” said Dr.
Basilio Monteiro, Assistant Professor at St. John’s University. “We
hope that new friendships made and old ones renewed will lead to
continued communication and growth. We also hope that our
ideas will lead to action.”
The program began with an enthusiastic, warm welcome from Father
Joaquim Loiola Pereira of the Archdiocese of Goa and Daman. He
called for all participants of the forum to consider ways that
information and communication technologies can serve the wholesome
development of the human being. He stressed the importance of
conversation, and that through communication the exchange of ideas
can play a role in the making of public policy.
Photo Gallery
S.C. Jamir, Governor of the State of Goa, then delivered the
inaugural address. The central theme of his talk called attention
to the power of ICTs to improve people’s resources and contribute
to human development. He expressed that this can be done by
providing accessibility to the common man, protection of rural life
and sustainable development with protection of human rights and
gender equity.
Monteiro then presented a framework for conversation by connecting
the local to the global while asking the question, how can we
scrutinize the implementation of ICTs to contribute to genuine
human dignity?
“We understand that we are in a time and place of great
change and that uncertainty generates an even greater tension
driving the complex forces we have engaged for our conversation,”
said Monteiro. “We understand our connectedness to this moment and
realize our personal need and moral responsibility to remain
engaged in the pressings concerns that face us now and will
undoubtedly continue to face us in the days to come.”
Dr. K. Subramanian gave the Keynote Address: ICT for India
2010: Empowering through e-Governance. He called for a
comprehensive vision with a holistic goal based upon a democracy
of “caring and sharing”. His central theme was ICTs role in
improving connectivity to solve the problems and improve human
conditions. He presented several models which might address these
pressing concerns and gave numerous practical examples of projects
that may give us examples to follow.
Several guest speakers from around the world highlighted the
three-day conference which included speeches by prominent
independent researchers, lecturers and educators like: Dr. Ashok
Jhunjhunwalla, Professor, IIT- Madras; Drs. Anjali Monteiro and
Jayasankar (Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai; Frederick
Noronha, Co-Founder, Bytesforall.org, Goa; Dr. Kevin
Rioux, Assistant Professor of Library and Information Science, St.
John’s University; Dr. Peter R. D'Souza, Co-Director, Lokniti -
Institute for Comparative Democracy, Programme of Centre for the
Study of Developing Societies New Delhi; Dr. K. Subramanian, Deputy
Director General at National Infomatics Center, Ministry of
Communications and Information Technology, New Delhi; Dr. Haridas
Varikottil, Caritas-India; Dr. Anibel Ferus-Comelo, Independent
Researcher and Educator, Goa and Dr. Freddie D’Souza, Director,
Justice and Peace Commission, Catholic Bishops Conference of
India.
On the final day of the conference the mood turned from optimism to
caution. All were reminded that all that glistens might not
be gold. Where then does the conversation go from here? There
was cause for hope in numerous examples presented during the
three-day long conference. There was no shortage of examples
for the optimist. There is also much to fuel the fears of
pessimists. Forces generated far away threaten to transform Goa in
the relatively near future. ICTs will play an important role
but only we will determine if it will be positive or negative, only
we will choose to behave proactively or reactively.
It became clear after the three-days of lectures, research reports
and educated thought that numerous and complex questions of
governance and public policy making influence how and what this
outcome will be. Civil society will have to play a major role
in solving problems if they are to be solved. Information and
communication technologies must play a crucial role in raising
consciousness if we hope to foster a future that will be
characterized by human flourishing.
For more information about the conference please contact Elizabeth
Reilly, Assistant Director of Media Relations at St. John’s
University by calling (718) 990-5789 or e-mail inquiries to reillye@stjohns.edu.