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LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN Demographics Background Jesus Lau, Ph.D. jlau@uv.mx Universidad Veracruzana World Library and Information Congress, 69th IFLA General Conference and Council, Africa, Asia & Oceania, and Latin America & Caribbean Workshop Berlin, Germany, August 7, 2003, Thursday, 13:30-17:30
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DEMOGRAPHICS OF LATIN AMERICA Countries Population Demographic growth Languages Share more similarities than differences 20 472 million 2% Spanish, Portuguese, French History, culture, religion
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SOCIO-ECONOMIC OVERVIEW Undergoing economic structural reforms Market oriented measures Enjoys economic growth 4.1% expected growth - 1997-2001 Close trade links with North America GDP related to size of territory
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LARGE GDP COUNTRIES
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MID-SIZE GDP COUNTRIES
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SMALL GDP COUNTRIES
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TELECOMM PROGRESS Telephones Cellular phones Satellites 32 million 24 million 34
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TELECOMM LARGE LA COUNTRIES
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TELECOMM MID-SIZE COUNTRIES COUNTRIES PHONES SATELLITES TV TV ´000 BROADCAST SETS STATIONS “000 Dominican R 1901 18 728 Ecuador 5851 33 940 Guatemala 2101 25 475 Peru 7722 140 2,000 Uruguay 4512 26 725 Total 2,2157242 4,868
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TELECOMM SMALL LA COUNTRIES
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CYBER PROGRESS Users Web pages Internet nodes Internet growth 5-8 million 150 thousand 191,129 788% Btwn 1995-7
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GLOBAL REACH Internet integrates Latin America Communication is easier and cheaper Creates greater information awareness Makes more information services available Contributes to have world class information users
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LIBRARY DEVELOPMENT Countries have made library progress Academic libraries are the best Internet is more used at academic libraries School and public libraries are scarce Information is still paper-based
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LIBRARY PICTURE Libraries Librarians LIS Schools Journals Published Newspapers 40,000 30,000 87 16,000 1,000
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INFORMATION USERS´ BACKGROUNG Middle to upper class Urban Young Usually a student or college graduate Lower income stratas (largest segment of population) are out of library reach
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CHALLENGE: INCREASE LOCAL TOUCH Provide services to the illiterate population Gather and organize local information Join efforts or face mass media overpower Define national information policies Increase information awareness among population
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CONCLUSIONS Latin America enjoys economic growth Telecommunications are growing Libraries have improved Global reach: Internet makes LA libraries part of the world Local reach: LA libraries require better access to local data Challenge: how to meet info demands of lower income sectors of society
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Let’s plan a more inclusive information future for all groups of society. Thanks! Jesús Lau Presentation available at: http://bivir.uacj.mx/lau *Data comes from different statistical sources used for a paper presented at ALA Conference, please see full paper for bibliographic details.
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