Community Networks Success Stories

Communities worldwide are coming together to build and maintain their own networks where traditional Internet services are yet to reach.

Farmers, students, entrepreneurs, teachers, engineers, and many more. People and community organizations are leading the way with one goal: to connect their communities to the Internet.

For 33 percent of the world, on every continent, in rural, remote, and even urban communities, each day without Internet access is a day of lost opportunity.

We help and provide grant funding to build community networks. Read their success stories.

53

community networks supported

funds granted (in USD)*

* since January 2020

Accessible format of this map

Featured Stories

a boy sitting in front of the computer in a classroom smiling

Khunde and Khumjung, Nepal

Children in the Khumjung school are more excited about their computer class than usual. The reason? They’re finally using the Internet—after years of learning about it only through textbooks. All thanks to a local initiative, in partnership with the Internet Society, that built the highest community network in the world.

a man standing on a ladder installing Internet hardware

Tuskegee, Alabama, United States

Alabama entrepreneur Boyd Stephens partnered with the Tuskegee Housing Authority and revisited a century-old idea to empower people through connectivity, bringing social and economic development to the local community.

a woman looking at the phone sitting at the top of the hill

Mamaila, South Africa

Kgopotso Magoro, inspired by an OpEd that claimed that “coming from a rural area is like being cursed” for the lack of opportunities available, started a journey that would lead to the creation of the Mamaila Community Network.

Five people in the field next to some pine trees.

Buenos Aires, Cauca, Colombia

To overcome decades of conflict and isolation, a Colombian community builds their own network. With the right policies they might be able to use it.

Learn how the community and local organizations are working to change regulations and reconnect to the world.

Teenage girl sitting at a table, using a desktop computer and a boy looking over her shoulder.

Shaghap, Armenia

In Shaghap, Armenia, over 170 families live in a quiet area far from urban centers. Agriculture and husbandry have long been their main source of income. But the lack of new opportunities has led to the exodus of Shaghap’s youth to the capital city of Yerevan where they can find other jobs and create better opportunities for their future. With Internet connectivity, they hope to change that.

Contribute to a world where everyone can benefit from the Internet’s opportunities.

Image copyrights:
© Nyani Quarmyne, © Boyd Stephens, © Nyani Quarmyne, © Colnodo, © Elyse Butler, © Internet Society