NetSquared enables social benefit organizations to leverage the tools of the social web.

net2 updates

Building community in your area? Check out the newly-launched Community Organizers Handbook! Everything you need to start and grow a NetSquared Local group or any other community-powered program.

Blogs

net2 local

NetSquared Local events provide a chance to connect locally with all those interested in the intersection of social technologies and social change. There are new groups forming every week: Join in!

net2 updates

Building community in your area? Check out the newly-launched Community Organizers Handbook! Everything you need to start and grow a NetSquared Local group or any other community-powered program.

Digital Diasporas

I remember from last year's Netsquared conference my sense of excited anticipation at how the rest of the world would use all these groovy new tools once they spread beyond Silicon Valley :). I've just written a blog post about digital diasporas & human rights and I'd like to follow it with a look at the non-Western use of web 2.0 for social change. If you've got any good examples then please leave a comment or contact me.

Of course, one of the most interesting things about the architecture of participation is that people are just going to do it anyway, without waiting for NGO's to catch up. So allow me to draw your attention to Egypt and the way brave individuals like Wael Abbas & others have used Youtube to help leverage the first ever prosecutions of Egyptian police for torture. Sadly, this goes alongside the rather more widely known prosecution & imprisonment of Egyptian blogger Kareem Amer.

p.s. on a lighter note, I've been mulling over a quote from Celine Petrossian (who's research ‘Liberating the Silenced: Iranian Bloggers in the Diaspora’ I've referenced in my digital diasporas post). She says "Iranian bloggers serve as 'merchants' of culture and information, trading cultural knowledge and news from both Iran to the outside world and from the West to the Iranian people living in Iran." Does that mean that blogosphere maps like these show the new Silk Routes?

Share this

Thanks for the comments

Thanks for the link Britt.

Hi Jeff, thanks for your comment, which get across some of the intensity that comes with something like the Orange Revolution. Like you i'm very interested in how social change movements in-country and outside can collaborate.

In terms of the threat to activists' use of  technology, you'd probably be interested to read Ethan Zuckerman's post We’ve got to adjust some of our threat models;.

 cheers

dan 


 

 

Alive in Baghdad

Howabout Alive in Baghdad?

Friends of Alive in Baghdad

Hi Britt
Did you see this?
Friends of Alive in Baghdad
best
dan

Net activism

Hi Dan,

As something of a participant in Ukraine's Orange Revolution your blog interests me. Under oppressive authoritarianism, all tangible components are at risk, servers and advocates alike. I know the underground movement there replicated the web itself in creating multiple redundancies. Not for them to be bombed out of their HQ or rendered the victim of the classic 2 bullet suicide.

We joined in as outsiders, using any resource - blogging, newspapers and radio media to get the message out, throwing down the gauntlet on corruption, we didn't like what we knew about children starving in a land of plenty.

We networked with mainstream activists at SocialEdge,  Omidyar, Daily Kos, Eurotrib and many others, gained editorial parmission on the activists own site. Many didn't like what they heard, some launched smear campaigns but they certainly weren't going to ignore us.

 

  

 

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

User login

Latest Comments

Sitemap