Intel is partnering with The Rockefeller Foundation to announce their collaboration on Intel ® She Will Connect at the upcoming World Economic Forum (WEF), taking place in Nigeria between 7 and 9 May 2014.
The World Economic Forum is an international institution that is committed to improving the state of the world through public-private cooperation in the spirit of global citizenship and as such, it is the perfect platform to announce this collaboration to boost the Intel She Will Connect program.
The initiative strives to halve the digital gender gap in Africa, by empowering five million women through digital literacy programs, with initial pilots in South Africa, Kenya, Nigeria and Zambia.
According to the Women and the Web report, in developing countries, 25 percent fewer women are online than men, and in sub-Saharan Africa, the gap rises to 43 percent.
Intel’s Vice President, Sales and Marketing Group General Manager, Intel World Ahead Program, John Davies: “Technology in general and the Internet in particular, has transformed the lives of billions of people. It opens up opportunities and possibilities that never could have been realized before. But women and girls are being left behind – which is why we are investing alongside other organizations to close the gap through Intel She Will Connect.”
The Intel ® She Will Connect program is an innovative combination of digital literacy training, an online peer network, and gender-relevant content. Consequently, these young women will be able to receive a better education, enhance their political participation, have a stronger voice in their communities, and increase their income by connecting to new economic opportunities.
The partnership with The Rockefeller Foundation will seek to connect those trained through the program to employment opportunities.