The Commonwealth showcases inclusion and sustainability in a new website designed to bridge the digital divide

09 February 2022
Press release
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The Commonwealth Secretariat has launched a new, inclusive, accessible and sustainable, mobile-first website.

As a vital part of its global connectivity and sustainability strategy, this week, the Commonwealth Secretariat is launching a new, inclusive, accessible and sustainable, mobile-first digital hub, in partnership with their long-term digital partner Cyber-Duck. The new website aims to ensure vital services, from e-learning and funding to campaign information are fully and centrally available for its broad and diverse audience, some of whom are in the hardest to reach places around the world.

The Commonwealth Secretariat delivers projects, technical expertise and tools to overcome some of the most crucial challenges of our time, such as adaptation to climate change, reducing inequality, and recovery from the global pandemic. To best achieve our goals, digital accessibility and exclusion must be addressed.

Digital inclusion

Speaking about the new website, Phalguni Sundaram Biswal, from Kolkata India and a Youth Ambassador of India at the recent G7 Youth summit (2021) said:

"As a young Indian working to reduce inequity and increase opportunities for young people in my community and globally, I’ve seen first-hand the impact of digital exclusion. The new Commonwealth website is interactive and informative. It provides users with a good level of interface and has information for the members and broader stakeholders. I look forward to using the information about the Commonwealth experiences to learn from them and share them with my network. I have already found information on the website useful and have already enrolled and completed the e-course on digital infrastructure and closing the digital divide.”

Commonwealth Secretary-General, the Rt Hon Patricia Scotland QC emphasised the Secretariat’s dedication to improving digital inclusion across the Commonwealth:

 “Our family of 54 nations, with different needs but shared interests, is home to 2.5 billion people. Promoting a sustainable digital transformation that broadens affordable and high quality digital access is a key goal of the Commonwealth Secretariat. Our own website is a vital tool. We identified a clear need for our digital strategy to help address issues of digital inclusion, sustainability and the speed of communicating with audiences especially during potential crises.” 

Improved accessibility

Delivering on this strategy, the new website’s improved accessibility and faster performance ensures that users in less developed countries with poor internet speeds, often accessed through mobile phone networks, will now be able to better access content such as a new Commonwealth training database that boosts ocean learning for government officials.

Features such as automated data visualisations will also provide users in Commonwealth states with accessible and easily understandable information such as social and economic data in real-time.

A critical goal of this project is to reduce the website’s environmental impact. The Commonwealth is committed to helping member states tackle climate change and adapt to its worst impacts and has been pushing for greater climate action since 1989 when Commonwealth leaders committed to protecting the environment in the Langkawi Declaration.

Cyber-Duck's Client Services Director, Chris Lewis, said:
Recent research from Lancaster University shows global emissions from computing and ICT are greater than that of the aviation industry, so as a digital agency committed to making digital experiences better, we relished the opportunity to work on this project. Combining strategic UX design and open-source technology allowed us to tackle this issue in two ways – create seamless user journeys that enable people to more swiftly and easily achieve their tasks and build these journeys in a way that minimises their environmental impacts. In doing so, not only were we addressing the Commonwealth's strategic priority of tackling climate change, we were also achieving their goal of improving digital inclusion - issues which we are also deeply committed to as an agency."

To better understand the digital barriers and opportunities involving the Commonwealth’s work, the Commonwealth Secretariat and Cyber-Duck conducted interviews with individuals such as His Excellency Dr Kevin Isaac, St. Kitts and Nevis High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, who said:

“The new mobile-friendly Commonwealth Secretariat website has a much-improved design, and is far more interactive and informative for users such as myself who are looking to quickly and easily find the latest information about various programmes and member countries. Now accessible to all Commonwealth citizens, the new website is a celebration of the shared values of the Commonwealth family.” 

Through this new website, the Commonwealth Secretariat aims to lead by example by addressing our own digital footprint and encouraging others to do the same.

Notes to Editors

About the Commonwealth – The Commonwealth is a voluntary association of 54 independent and equal sovereign states. Our combined population is 2.5 billion, of which more than 60 per cent is aged 29 or under. The Commonwealth spans the globe and includes both advanced economies and developing countries. Thirty-two of our members are small states, many of which are island nations. The Commonwealth Secretariat supports member countries to build democratic and inclusive institutions, strengthen governance and promote justice and human rights. Our work helps to grow economies and boost trade, deliver national resilience, empower young people, and address threats such as climate change, debt and inequality. For more information, visit https://thecommonwealth.org/

Media Contact

Rena Gashumba
Communication Adviser
Communications Division
Commonwealth Secretariat
T: +44 7483 919 968
Email: [email protected]

Website thecommonwealth.org
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