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Grassroots Social Justice Event Turnout with Local Leaders

Describe your challenge: 

(Note:  I'll be in the Bay area in October 2006 and could meet face to face.) 

Goal:  Find the right combination of Web2.0 tools for a volunteer core group to use to help turnout people for a local social-justice event, scheduled in 3 months.

In just one volunteer network, for example, nationally there are 10,000+ local people, already involved in various communities, to mobilize for particular events.

Tools I have so far:

Tools I need: 

A local community network and project-oriented collaborative web space. Coordinators first learn to use this at a local face-to-face meeting.  Then together for 3 months they utilize it asynchronously to help build participation for a successful event.  The website would include simplified workplace e-tools and short videos, appropriate for busy volunteers.

Its purpose is social facilitation: to encourage people to perform better at simple tasks when they know they're observing one another.  Tasks include extending personal invitations to attend the event, listening and engaging others to participate based on their particular interests and gifts.  See: 12 Guiding Principles of Community Engagement.

WhizSpark invitation websites produce Excel spreadsheets. I want to mash up and report invitations sent, etc. graphically in the collaborative web space for others to see.  Bar charts and a campaign thermometer would help build campaign momentum by representing:

  • Event invitations sent so far

  • RSVPs received
  • 1-on-1 Visit (survey) results, represented with tags.

Simplified, volunteer-appropriate features in collaborative web space might also facilitate:

  • mailing list (spreadsheet) display
  • project management
  • document downloads
  • a discussion forum.

Today there is a downward spiral of civic apathy.  Our national stockpile of social capital  -- our reserve of personal bonds and fellowship -- is seriously depleted.  We need  democratic social-capital strategies like this to enable busy people to act bettertogether.

There's also a market for such event-organizing tools.  Example:  school reunions.  But on this wetpaint.com High-School reunion wiki notice the last comment:  Poor planning.

Web2.0 tools could help facilitate more effectively-planned events by supporting grassroots coordinators online to engage and mobilize busy people.

Mac Johnson  psmcovky at usa.net

New Richmond, Ohio (Cincinnati area)

"...Remember me as a drum major for justice."  -- Martin Luther King Jr.

 

Uppity Wisconsin

Supporting organization: 
Cruiskeen Consulting LLC - Uppity Wisconsin
URL: 
http://www.uppitywis.org
Location: 
Menomonie, WI
Project Description: 

Uppity Wisconsin is an attempt at building a collaborative on-line web presence to promote progressive ideas in Wisconsin Politics. This is a new site (based on the Drupal CMS). It uses a combination of incoming and outgoing RSS, Blogs, Video, and email for communications.

Uppity Wisconsin is currently looking for authors and contributors of all kinds. The current challenge is to find enough contributors to build a vibrant community.

MobileActive

Supporting organization: 
Green Media Toolshed and TechStrategy
URL: 
www.mobileactive.org
Location: 
Massachusetts
Project Description: 

MobileActive is a global network of organizations, technologists, organizers, and activists who are using mobile phones in their social change work.

Mobile phones have emerged as a campaign organizing tool across traditional socio-economic and cultural boundaries. Mobile phone campaigns have swung elections through innovative get-out-the-vote activities, have been used to ensure impartial elections through monitoring, have resulted in massive collective action to free political prisoners, and are being used in public health strategies.

Yet, while there is significant innovation all over the world, there is little aggregation of lessons learned from these campaigns and activities that is being collected and aggregated by civil society practitioners for their peers.

MobileActive seeks to better understand the strengths and limits of the medium, available technologies for campaigners, share lessons learned, feature campaign examples and tech tools so to increase activists’ ability to organize our constituencies with this new technology.

MobileActive 2005 convened in Toronto to bring together, for the first time, activists from around the world to explore the use of mobile phones in civic action campaigns. The MobileActive community and web site is an aggregation of the learnings from this convergence, stories from participants and their projects, and resources for activists interested in using mobiles in their campaigns.

MobileActive is now growing the network of mobile activists, to share knowledge and skills, and to provide a peer network, training, and resources to those interested in exploring mobile phones in their civic engagagement, mobilization, and civic action campaigns.

If you used mobiles in your campaign, please share your story at http://www.mobileactive.org! If you need resources, let us know! And if you want to join this growing network of activists from around the globe, profile yourself: http://www.mobileactive.org/profile

Welcome to MobileActive - http://www.mobileactive.org

Arts Engine

Supporting organization: 
Arts Engine, Inc.
URL: 
www.artsengine.net
Location: 
New York City
Project Description: 

Arts Engine, Inc. supports, produces, and distributes independent media of consequence and promotes the use of independent media by advocates, educators and the general public. By fostering the production and use of independent film, video and new media, Arts Engine connects media makers and active audiences in order to spur critical consideration of pressing social issues.

Our projects include:

Big Mouth Films
Big Mouth Films produces feature-length, social issue documentaries independently and in collaboration with numerous companies and organizations. Big Mouth is best known for the Emmy-nominated film Deadline, a compelling exploration of the events surrounding governor George Ryan's commutation of 167 death sentences in Illinois.
www.artsengine.net/projects

MediaRights.org
MediaRights helps media makers, educators, librarians, nonprofits, and activists use documentaries and shorts to encourage action and inspire dialogue on contemporary social issues.
www.mediarights.org

Media That Matters Film Festival
The Media That Matters Film Festival brings high-impact shorts and Take Action tools to audiences around the country all year long through distribution of a DVD with all sixteen films, Web streaming, broadcasts and community screenings.
www.mediathatmattersfest.org

YMDi
The Youth Media Distribution Initiative (YMDi.org) is a comprehensive series of online and offline programs that boost the distribution and impact of youth-made films.
www.YMDi.org

wildlive! - using mobile phones to promote conservation

Supporting organization: 
Fauna & Flora International, Cambridge
URL: 
http://www.kiwanja.net
Location: 
Cambridge, United Kingdom
Project Description: 

For a full project description, along with additional screenshots and content samples, see www.kiwanja.net/wildlive!.htm

Blacktie, LLC

Supporting organization: 
Blacktie, LLC
URL: 
www.blacktie-colorado.com
Project Description: 

Blacktie is an organization that provides a variety of internet tools to
nonprofit organizations and philanthropists.  We form "community" around a
centralized website.  For more information, go to: www.blacktie-colorado.com

 

Hands On Bay Area

Supporting organization: 
Hands On Bay Area
URL: 
www.handsonbayarea.org
Project Description: 

Hands On Bay Area Day is an event during which twelve-hundred volunteers at 51 community service projects across the Bay Area completed more than 7,000 hours of service valued at more than $120,000. This day is also the biggest fundraising event for Hands On Bay Area, when a large part of its budget is acquired through donations raised by volunteers. It is an organization that provides year-round service to the community.

Hands On Bay Area is a unique organization with a mission to mobilize communities to action. Many people find it difficult to volunteer for several reasons: trouble choosing what activity to do; the long-term commitment often required by organizations; and the number of hours organizations request weekly or monthly of volunteers. 

What HOBA does is eliminate these barriers by acting as a liaison between volunteers and organizations and coordinating projects that make it easy to volunteer and help organizations meet their needs. They use an interactive database and email to do so.

Each month HOBA offers hundreds of meaningful volunteer projects coordinated with over 300 agencies. Hands On Bay Area projects each have a project leader who acts as the contact person for volunteers and ensures events go smoothly at the site. People interested in volunteering sign up for a one-hour orientation with HOBA, at which they learn about HOBA and how to sign up for projects. They are given an account on the website, and after it's activated, they can peruse the calendar and sign themselves up for projects. The volunteers control how often they do a project and how many projects they complete. HOBA simply asks that volunteers try to complete two projects annually.

Hands On Bay Area offers a wide array of projects: promoting literacy, maintaining parks, providing meals at homeless shelters, mentoring children, socializing with senior citizens, and much more. Volunteers often develop friendships as the encounter each other on various projects. There is also a team activity, where groups of people can sign up to participate in a set number of projects that focus on an impact area; by doing this, they deepen their knowledge about the issue and develop community together.

Earth Share of Washington

URL: 
www.esw.org/
Project Description: 

"Earth Share of Washington is 66 leading environmental organizations that help to protect our environment and quality of life - locally, nationally and internationally. Earth Share of Washington partners with businesses and government agencies to encourage employees to give to the environment at work through payroll giving programs, volunteer projects and involvement in our annual Day in the Park."

This site makes it easy for someone (in Washinton) to locate opportunites to participate in efforts to protect the environment. By aggregating activities sponsored by 66 different organizations and presenting multiple paths to engagement the site makes it very easy for a user to locate an activity that fits their skills and abilities.

The Earth Share site is firmly focused on task and this echoes through the site. Navigation is easy and clear. Users can subscribe, via email, to a monthly newsletter or syndicate news content.

Monetray donations are handled through "Groundspring.org" , a third party donation processing site.

Dave Manelski, the group's Program Coordinator and Webmaster was recently interviewed for Net Squared.

  
 

Sharing mailing lists

Describe your challenge: 

There are lots of times when non-profits want to work together to do common outreach, fundraising or advocacy campaigns on specific issues. But mailing lists are like gold, and it's really hard for organizations to share those names with other organizations. How can organizations get past that barrier?

Ideas and solutions: 

It would be great if there were tools for double-blind sharing -- tools that would allow organizations to compile a joint mailing from separate mailing lists, without getting access to one another's lists.

New Orleans Voices For Peace

Supporting organization: 
Plenty International
URL: 
http://www.neworleansvfp.org
Location: 
New Orleans
Project Description: 

Providing Internet access, website hostng, media development and training for partnering organizations and communities effected by the Hurricanes Rita and Katrina.

Coming Soon:

New Orleans Voices For Peace Mobile Media Lab

* Our goal is to assemble a Web 2.0 mutual empowerment mobile media labs which will provide technological access in the name of solidarity.

MISSION:
*With an understanding of culture, class and racial divides we strive to engage in mutual empowerment of residents, activists and grassroots organizations in the Gulf Coast region who have been left without a voice in the digital age. In short, to give voice to the voiceless.

*In order to create fusion in ideas and put those ideas to action the Mobile Media Lab will provide a common ground where organizations working from all over the spectrum can unite in order to bridge the disconnect often found between local organizations and our natural allies working on a national level.

*We will do this by providing free internet access and conducting multimedia training(s) in a mobile media lab where Gulf Coast residents and area organizations can create testimony to their continuous struggles and document progress made since the disaster. To properly address the clear connections between the disaster in New Orleans as a microcosm of the injustices created by Western Society, we will provide technological assistance and education to aid in the assembly of folk stories related to the tragedy of New Orleans. This project can be conducted both locally and throughout the diaspora.

PROJECT:
*Create a mobile news team to document events in NOLA, and around the country (demonstrations, disaster relief, educational tours, etc.). In addition, we will promote training with partnering organizations in media production.

*Provide an open source web portal to both socialize and focus the information of all participants. This will be conducted through the following hosts: http://www.neworleansvfp.org, http://neworleansnetwork.org http://www.commongroundrelief.org, http://www.ivawdeployed.org, and others.

*Create a mobile computer literacy lab to remove the technological hurdles to equal media access (including printing, fax, internet skills, social networking, & access/management of information that has been recorded).

POSSIBLE COLLABORATIVE EFFORTS:
*9th ward history project -mapping the history of the residents in the 9th Ward, documenting their survival, rescue, relocation and recovery through collaboration with residents, volunteers, universities, faith-based groups, and grassroots organizations.

PARTNERING ORGANIZATIONS:
United Peace Relief (http://www.unitedpeacerelief.org)
Common Ground Relief (http://www.commongroundrelief.org)
New Orleans Voices For Peace (http://www.neworleansvfp.org)

PASSED INTERNET ACCESS AND MOBILE MEDIA LAB PROJECTS:
Veterans For Peace, chapter 116, Internet access, IMPEACHMENT BUS
CAMP CASEY I, Internet access, Crawford, TX
Camp Covington, Internet access, Covington, LA
Common Ground Relief, Internet Access, New Orleans, LA
Emergency Communities, Internet access, Buras, LA
Four Directions Solidarity Network, Internet access, Dulac, LA
Camp Liberty, Internet Access, Slidell, LA

PROGRAM NEEDS:
*media equipment - imacs, audio/video equipment, satellite Internet, digital video and still cameras, digital videon projector, PA system.

TRANSPORTATION NEEDS:
*Bus - Retired school buses or entertainer tour buses.

FINANCIAL SUPPORT
Mobile Media Lab will generate operating capital and travel budgets through grants, contracting of production services, retail sales of concessions, tickets and soliciting donations.

More information (http://www.neworleansvfp.org/node/2269)

Contact: gordonsoderberg@mac.com
504 613-0174

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