1970
Information Needs and the Consultative Relationship
in the Second United Nations Development Decade
-- / --
Note on the perspective for the exchange of information between
the United Nations, Specialized Agencies, other Inter-governmental Organizations
and the International Non-governmental Organizations (NGOs)
Current Position
- (a)
Governmental bodies would like to ensure that NGOs are informed of their
programmes
(b) Governmental bodies would like to know of the existence of NGO programmes
in areas of interest related to or affecting their own activities
- (a) NGOs would like to ensure that governmental bodies are
aware of their
own programmes
(b) NGOs would like to ensure that they are informed of governmental programmes
of interest to them or which affect their own programmes
- The current consultative status arrangement is highly
charged politically and does not necessarily correspond to the information
needs of the Specialized Agency
- Specialized Agencies can work directly with NGOs without
any need for formal recognition or consultative status of any kind
- Most
Specialized Agencies are now investigating methods of processing information
by computer
Consultative Status and Information Exchange
- The
current debate concerns the effectiveness of the consultative relationship
and the need to protect it
- Consultative status may be considered to contain the
following elements:
- (a) advice given or offered on a particular issue
- (b)
information supplied in report form
(c) information on the organization operating
programmes (members,
budget, executive officers, staff, etc.)
information on current programmes and future plans (fields of activity,
persons responsible, budget allocation, countries of activity, etc)
(d) recognition of the existence of a
private organization by a
public organization, thus increasing, in some cases, the status of
the private organization
recognition of the representative of the private organization, thus
increasing, in some cases, the status of that person
- Items 2 (a) and (b) cover the cases where the topic is complex
and requires judgement or the support of a lengthy evaluative, and possibly
statistical, study. Current procedures can only be improved with difficulty.
Due to the need for person to person contact, item (d) is also involved.
- Item 2 (c) represents a totally different problem. This covers what
the organization is, what it does, and what it plans to do. Such information
should ideally "be exchanged "between IGOs and NGOs in a highly
standardized format. It enables each to assess the value of the other's
programmes and. their real scope
- Confusion between the methods required for (3) and (4) leads to inefficiency
in the exchange of information under (4) and to lack of understanding of
the modern techniques appropriate to such an exchange
- In particular, the
efforts to obtain a united NGO front on any
issue are
concerned with type (3) problems, History indicates a low probability of
a
significant breakthrough in this area. The conditions under which such
unity
could be obtained might even be considered harmful to the role which NGOs
as
a whole perform for society.
- The question may therefore be raised as to
whether the desirable features of
such "unity" cannot be better located in a politically neutral form such
as a unified collection of information -- in a purely technical sense.
The juxtaposition of standard information on a variety of organizations
does not then imply any link between them. The problem is thus transposed
from a political setting to a technical setting -- except for the
residual political problem of deciding who is to be responsible for maintenance
of the file and; on what basis it is to be consulted.
Proposal to increase the information exchange capability of IGOs and NGOs
- (a) It must
be recalled that the volume of information involved is too great to permit
its exchange to be satisfactory using a printed document. The .number of
persons requiring all sections of such a hypothetical publication on a
regular basis is a very small percentage of those requiring small sections
based on specific queries which may differ slightly from month to month.
Such persons cannot be expected to obtain a,nd scan a lengthy and costly
document, even if well indexed, to locate the few items relevant to his
or her activities
(b) In addition, it is important to recognize that
one use of a list of organizations, whatever the criteria by which they
were selected, is to send something to them. The availability of a printed
list does not necessarily mean that the addresses can be conveniently transferred
to envelopes for mailing. This is
a very real, if mundane, administrative problem. The time and resources
required for this operation may be a significant barrier to- effective
use of the information oven if available
(c) Finally, it is important to recognize that
the persons to whom the information can be usefully retransmitted will
vary according to the type of information currently on file and will therefore
change from week to week. This requirement is not suited to the operation
of a document distribution mailing list
- Suppose that NGOs could channel (directly or indirectly)
information on their organization^ its current and planned programmes,
its members, etc. into a central computer file. This could take the form
of one or more magnetic tapes.
- Copies of this file could be sent regularly to each Specialized
Agency.
- Each Agency with computer facilities could then arrange
for the tape to be scanned according to its programme interests; current
queries; or fields of interest registered by individual departments in
the secretariat or by individual delegates. Alternatively, the file could
be scanned for information on the current activities of those NGOs with
which it had a formal consultative relationship. This information
would be printed out, or perhaps transferred to some other tape. If the
query was for a mailing list (questionnaire!
distribution of a report on a particular subject matter, information on
a new programme or meeting, etc), the printout could be made directly
onto envelope labels for immediate use.
- The Agencies without computer facilities could arrange for
this to be done for them either commercially, or by another agency in
the same geographical area.
- An additional possibility is
that the Specialized Agencies should feed onto the file, as it was being
scanned, new information about their own programmes, for the benefit of
NGOs (and perhaps other IGOs). Such new information would then be used
to update the central file when the tape was returned.
- NGOs, UN Agencies and other inter-governmental organizations
would then be in a position to obtain a systematic picture of current programmes
(and the organizations responsible) in those areas which were of interest.
This could be done withqut the need for formal contact between the different
organizations -- except for the purely administrative problem of transferring
the file copy
Advantages
- The main advantage is clearly that each organization
needs only to be concerned with getting its programme information into
the central file and extracting whatever is currently considered to be
of interest. It does not have to consider whether it recognizes the organization
interested in that information or providing the information extracted.
- This approach could avoid some inter-departmental jurisdictional
problems, Since the department filing the information (or registering interest
in a particular category of information which may at some stage appear
on the file) is not "in contact" with any particular outside organization
for aay purpose, no grounds for friction with other departments are involved.
(The technique is in effect ideal for the circulation of internal information
across jurisdictional boundaries. Each department is sent via the
computer any information filed by a department in another part of the organization.
The only link, which results in the transfer, is the common interest in
a particular subject.) By ensuring that the computer automatically redirects
or addresses information on a particular subject to the persons who have
registered an interest in that subject within the agency, the effectiveness
of retransmission of information is considerably increased.
- This approach avoids the communication blockages which arise
because a particular
organization is assumed to have programmes in a particular area only. Some
sub-sections of an organization may have programmes which touch on an entirely
different sector (eg FAO programmes touching on health (WHO) or education
(UNESCO), etc). Rigid classification of fFAOf would prevent health NGOs
from detecting the FAO programmes in question. The same is true of Specialized
Agencies which may be faced with the problem of keeping informed of new
programmes of NGOs which, from the stated aims or past programmes of the
NGO
would not be expected to have programmes of interest or even be considered
to merit consultative relationship with that particular agency. This is
particularly important in the case of inter-disciplinary environmental
problems "
or broad areas of interest such as 'development1 which
may cover many specialized programmes.
- Specialized Agencies
are better able to judge whether by informing the .international NGO
they are effectively informing its members via its international periodical,
or whether the KGO cannot effectively retransmit information. This knowledge
should enable Specialized Agencies to design their public relations.
and information campaigns with greater skill. As an example^ more economic
to allocate funds to extend the free circulation of an existing NGO periodical,
rather than attempt to adapt the contents of the agency fact sheet and
send this to each of the national members.
Problems
- The
major problem is clearly that of deciding who should be responsible for
updating the central file and coordinating the arrangement. In the initial
stages this would not be important and one organization could be responsible,
perhaps in association with others"
At a later stage, it would perhaps
be an advantage to have several regional or specialist files which could
be the responsibility of committees of NGOs in each area. These files could
then be used to update copies of the central file. Once sufficient organizations
were actively involved in the updating process? the question of ultimate
responsibility should not arise. Each updating point would add to the file
copies in circulation,, It should not be necessary to have a single organization
in overall controlt This would probably be undesirable since such an organization
would tend to exclude particular types of data of interest to others.
- The second problem is how the file would be built up and
updated in the
initial stages when only a few NGOs could participate actively because
of lack of understanding of the techniques required. Clearly it is impossible
to expect individual NGOs to provide the information, coded and formated
in a manner suitable for computer input. This could however be done for
them using the sort of procedure employed by the Union of International
Associations to produce and update the Yearbook of International Organizations
and the annual International Congress Calendar
These problems should become unimportant within the next ten years as remote
terminals become widely available. Then it should be possible for many users
to update the file and consulted from many points. The file would then be
split up between regional or agency computer centers linked whenever a
particular query necessitated it.
In the near future (2-3 years), for example, it should be possible
for each Specialized Agency to instal a remote computer terminal
in the "NGO Room" of its headquarters This could be
used by each NGO to:
- update the sections of the file on which its own programmes were
located (many security features can be incorporated)';
- locate Specialized Agency (or NGO) programmes in which it might be
interested (and perhaps the appropriate document call numbers)
and by the Specialized Agency to transmit programme and meeting
information to NGOs and thus avoid the delays inherent in document production
and distribution. This cotild prove a most important technique for improving
the effectiveness of constiltative relations.