1、#DigitalUNDP1DIGITAL STRATEGY2022 2025UNITED NATIONS DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME#DigitalUNDP2Foreword 3Executive summary 5Introduction 6Digital Strategy 2019-2021 8Part 1 Guiding principles and value proposition 10 Guiding principlesValue proposition Part 2 Setting the course 16Vision and objectivesPathwa
2、y 1 Programmatic objectives Pathway 1 Programmatic outcomes Pathway 2 Operational objective Pathway 2 Operational outcomes Part 3 Strategy implementation approach and measuring results 32Ensuring direction and accountabilityMonitoring implementationDigital transformation roles and responsibilitiesSc
3、anning the horizon for whats nextPartnerships and communicationsMeasurement and reporting Annex 40Contents#DigitalUNDP3The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted how digital connectivity is fast becoming the global metric of inclusion and exclusion with 2.9 billion people still offline. The digital divid
4、e, notably the lack of affordable broadband internet and appropriate digital skills, have prevented many people, especially the most vulnerable, from working or studying from home during the crisis. Remarkably, one in three children missed out on remote learning when COVID-19 shuttered schools with
5、students in countries with low human development disproportionately affected. Notably, the digital divide is also harmful to civil society and activists. Trapped offline, their ability to advocate for change in key areas like climate action is stifled.Yet the pandemic also demonstrated the incredibl
6、e power of digital technology. From Honduras to Nigeria, the United Nations (UN) assisted countries to leverage the potential of digital finance to support critical electronic cash transfer programmes, benefitting millions of people. In the Maldives and Brazil, the United Nations Development Program