By Ismael Peña-López (@ictlogist), 26 April 2008
Main categories: Digital Divide, ICT4D, Meetings, Nonprofits, Participation, Engagement, Use, Activism
Other tags: e-stas, e-stas2008
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e-STAS is a Symposium about the Technologies for the Social Action, with an international and multi-stakeholder nature, where all the agents implicated in the development and implementation of the ICT (NGO’s, Local authorities, Universities, Companies and Media) are appointed in an aim to promote, foster and adapt the use of the ICT for the social action.
Here come my notes for session VI.
Ángel de la Riva
Cibervoluntarios
CiberMix: Diffusion and advocacy program that shows the benefits of ICTs in institutions, firms and citizens in rural areas through educational, leisure, content and services activities.
periodismociudadano.com: a gate for initiatives, experiences, people, etc. that deal with citizen journalism.
The goals of citizen journalism (and blogging): listen, link, impact, share.
Digital World Forum on Accessible and Inclusive ICT
.
Low cost computing has revolutionized access to ICTs. Now the project wants to analyze where technology is heading.
The problem of low cost computers is data storage, but if Internet access is cheap too (i.e. thanks to cheap wireless networks), the data can be stored online.
infopreneur: the telecenter at the minimum expression, developed by the Meraka Foundation.
Emprendedores sociales, Ashoka‘s branch in Spain to foster social entrepreneurship.
Carlos Flores
socialGNU, to foster the diffusion and use of free software in nonprofits.
Alejandro Simon
Zoowa, to create and share your agenda 2.0.
e-Stas 2008, Symposium on Technologies for Social Action (2008)
By Ismael Peña-López (@ictlogist), 24 April 2008
Main categories: ICT4D, Meetings, Nonprofits, Participation, Engagement, Use, Activism
Other tags: e-stas, e-stas2008
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e-STAS is a Symposium about the Technologies for the Social Action, with an international and multi-stakeholder nature, where all the agents implicated in the development and implementation of the ICT (NGO’s, Local authorities, Universities, Companies and Media) are appointed in an aim to promote, foster and adapt the use of the ICT for the social action.
Here come my notes for session V.
Subjects
- Free software
- Accessibility and usability
- Linguistic diversity
- Educational programmes
- New content programmes
Debate
(random ideas, slightly sorted/grouped)
Muhammad Yunus proposes a new kind of enterprise where the focus is on stakeholders and not on shareholders, where no profit is seek, but only social benefit.
Low cost computers/devices are converging with mainstream infrastructures. Now the issue is content. There is no content for education, and this should be urgently addressed. And this content should be localized, as long as it’s happening with software (sometimes).
Nonprofits and firms could provide this content.
But can this content can be created in the same ways as free software?
People should bet on free software (not open source software), with a focus on the philosophy of free software: new ethics of work, money and network.
Knowledge should be free and is the Humanity’s patrimony. No one should own knowledge (and this includes software). Content is just the support (and can hence be owned), and each society will generate its own. Technology (= applied knowledge) should be free so it can be appropriated by individuals and communities.
If software is free, usability and accessibility come naturally, as long as linguistic diversity. Let aside costs.
Hardware, software, content, etc. should be measured by their social value, not their price, thus leading to a new ethics of value. The Digital Divide is created by the market, so the market should be taken into the spotlight when trying to bridge the Digital Divide.
The citizenry should be literate enough to be able to distinguish between different software and different content. To be aware of the implications, needs, threats, benefits of the Information Society.
Accessibility is not only being able to access ICTs/the Internet, but willing to and be aware of the costs and benefits of doing it.
Education is a very important issue, but who trains the trainers? Shouldn’t be the digital literacy trainers be more literate in e.g. technology neutrality and teach skills/competences and not specific applications?
Training should be appealing to the end user (e.g. stress in their short run needs), but also a door to further skills achieving. And these skills should include higher levels of thought where the individual can not only use some technologies, but be able to choose among several ones, reflect on their process of choice, etc.
e-Stas 2008, Symposium on Technologies for Social Action (2008)
By Ismael Peña-López (@ictlogist), 24 April 2008
Main categories: Digital Divide, Digital Literacy, ICT4D, Meetings, Nonprofits, Participation, Engagement, Use, Activism
Other tags: e-stas, e-stas2008
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e-STAS is a Symposium about the Technologies for the Social Action, with an international and multi-stakeholder nature, where all the agents implicated in the development and implementation of the ICT (NGO’s, Local authorities, Universities, Companies and Media) are appointed in an aim to promote, foster and adapt the use of the ICT for the social action.
Here come my notes for session III. (notes at random, grouped by speaker, but not necessarily in chronological order)
Left to right: Raoul Weiler, Jérôme Combaz, María del Mar Negreiro, Berta Maure Rubio
It will be possible for everyone to access the Internet trough/thanks to low cost devices.
But education will make the difference, not devices.
Jérôme Combaz, Charte pour l’Inclusion Numérique et Sociale
Technology has to be transparent and should address social problems in a social way.
María del Mar Negreiro, European Union Lisbon Strategy
i2010 focuses on uses, digital literacy and how the Internet can help people connect each other, access better jobs, etc. To do so, focus on skills.
Teachers are using — the ones that do — the Internet to prepare their classes, get some materials, but they are not using ICTs when teaching or into the classroom. There still is a reluctance to do so, even if students seem pleased and more motivated when such a thing happens. Lack of skills, lack of time, lack of technical support are among the main reasons adduced by teachers to justify not being more pro-active fostering the use of ICTs when teaching.
Accessibility and usability as a goal to achieve more and better access to the Internet. And, thus, that people find Internet useful for their daily life.
e-Stas 2008, Symposium on Technologies for Social Action (2008)
By Ismael Peña-López (@ictlogist), 24 April 2008
Main categories: ICT4D, Meetings, Nonprofits, Participation, Engagement, Use, Activism
Other tags: e-stas, e-stas2008
No Comments »
e-STAS is a Symposium about the Technologies for the Social Action, with an international and multi-stakeholder nature, where all the agents implicated in the development and implementation of the ICT (NGO’s, Local authorities, Universities, Companies and Media) are appointed in an aim to promote, foster and adapt the use of the ICT for the social action.
Here come my notes for session II. (notes at random, grouped by speaker, but not necessarily in chronological order)
Left to right: Daniel Pimienta, Stéphanie Lucien-Brun, Kafui Amenu Prebbie
ICTs can be very strong barriers towards rights expression if are not properly made accessible for everyone.
We should not talk about access, but about uses, strictly related with capacity. How technologies are appropriated and how people and communities are empowered. And how do you make sense of these technologies for emancipatory purposes, for community building, to engage people in the conversation and in participation.
Daniel Pimienta, Funredes
Participation is the key.
He explains a couple of interesting stories about open access and open science.
We should avoid strengthening the manufacturers (de facto) monopolies by training people not in capacities but in specific applications.
Digital literacy should be given way more importance than actually is.
Intellectual Property Rights need to be reconsidered (definition, application, etc.), as they are, in their actual state, a clear barrier for both the development of the Information Society and development in general.
The role of the Third Sector should not be connectivity, but appropriation.
How can the Digital Divide can be closed by using low cost technologies? The limiting factor of access is cost.
Then comes the right use of technology, and how to teach the best use of it.
Open Hardware Initiative, Merakis.
e-Stas 2008, Symposium on Technologies for Social Action (2008)
By Ismael Peña-López (@ictlogist), 24 April 2008
Main categories: Digital Divide, ICT4D, Meetings, Nonprofits, Online Volunteering, Participation, Engagement, Use, Activism
Other tags: e-stas, e-stas2008, Raul Zambrano, UNDP
1 Comment »
e-STAS is a Symposium about the Technologies for the Social Action, with an international and multi-stakeholder nature, where all the agents implicated in the development and implementation of the ICT (NGO’s, Local authorities, Universities, Companies and Media) are appointed in an aim to promote, foster and adapt the use of the ICT for the social action.
Here come my notes for session I.
Raul Zambrano, UNDP
ICTs, Digital Divide and Social Inclusion
Four stages of ICT Development
- connectivity, get people connected
- content and have people have capacities to deal with it
- services
- participation, Web 2.0
Digital divide
- Within countries
- Among countries
- Within and among countries
The difference between the digital divide in developed countries and developing ones is that in developing ones is but another manifestation of other divides — this is not necessarily this way in developed countries.
How can technology bride social divides, not technological divides?
Divides: differences attributed to knowledge, and differences dues to more physical and human capital.
Both the speed of adoption and the speed of diffusion of technologies are have very different paths in developed and developing countries [So, it’s not just that leapfrogging can be made possible (adoption), but it has to be actually fostered (diffusion). But, part of fostering diffusion to achieve quicker and broader adoption is about giving the population what they need and/or are asking for].
Thus, in the policy cycle (social gaps, awareness raising, citizen participation, agenda setting, policy design, development focused, implementation, evaluation/assessment, reduction of social gaps, new emerging issues), these population needs must be taken into account when designing public policies.
In this policy cycle, networking is crucial to gather all sensibilities and ensure that participation does take place. If there is not citizen participation, public policies are likely to be government’s or lobbies’ interests biased.
All in all, it’s about empowerment.
Comments, questions
I ask whether it’s better push (public led) or pull (private sector led) strategies.
Raul Zambrano answers in the framework of developing countries. In these developing countries, the Estate is to foster and create aggregated demand, it is the main purchaser, investor and installer of ICTs (infrastructures, services, etc.).
On the other hand, it is true that there is a latent demand from the citizenry, and there already is a manifested need for ICTs.
About the private sector, the problem in developing countries is that the private sector might not have resources enough to set up pull strategies. Or maybe they could, but it still makes poor sense for them when looking at the Return of Investment. This is especially true with developed countries firms trying to get established in developing countries, though local enterprises might not think (and behave) alike, and find it’s huge benefits what elsewhere might not even make it worth it trying.
So, put short, in developing countries what seems to be working is a centralized model but progressively decentralized [as the subsidiarity principle in the European Union, I’d dare add].
Do we need to keep on working on access (if everyone already has a cellular)?
Yes, definitely, but not as an independent variable but as a dependent one [this is one of the cleverest statements I’ve heard in months about the digital divide].
Paco Ortiz (AHCIET) intervenes in this issue: incumbent telecomms normally pay a ratio of their profits to governments so the latter can help solve the last mile issue. The problem being that once these governments have cash to do so, the sometimes shift the funds to other priorities — no critique intended: these priorities can be Education or Health. Thus, legitimate or not, the result is that universal access is never achieved, but not at the private sector’s fault.
One person from the audience harshly attacks governments for their corruption, which invalidates them to foster any kind of policy or to get any kind of funding from whom ever.
Raul Zambrano states that it is precisely transparency and accountability one of the main goals of ICTs in the sphere of the government.
e-Stas 2008, Symposium on Technologies for Social Action (2008)
By Ismael Peña-López (@ictlogist), 17 April 2008
Main categories: ICT4D, Nonprofits, Online Volunteering
6 Comments »
In a research I made some years ago (see more info below) I described a taxonomy and a typology for online volunteers. The typology had four types of online volunteering:
- Type I: Online Advocacy
- Type II: Online Assessment & Consultancy
- Type III: Onlined Offline Volunteers
- Type IV: Pure Online Volunteers
These types of online volunteering where based on the kind of tasks that an online volunteer could perform, especially by looking at what made different (beyond the obvious) an online volunteer from a traditional, onsite volunteer.
These differences can be summed up like this:
- Knowledge intensive — not workload intensive
- Able to use small amount of spared times between other tasks, or in the impasse from one task to another one — e.g. at workplace, at home, on the way from workplace to home, etc.
- Can quickly perform multiple, small and short run tasks
- Can work in a decentralized way
- Can network
One of the main conclusions was that online volunteering could help nonprofits regain “lost” volunteers that could not go ahead with all of their daily duties plus onsite volunteering engagement, or just access an unexploited cluster of goodwill people that could not volunteer because they were too busy or too aged to do some tasks (e.g. build a school in an overseas country).
I’m happy to see that this is exactly what Fundación Bip-Bip has done with their new project Microvoluntarios.org.
The site is a network where nonprofits can upload requirements for help that enrolled volunteers can help achieving. The difference is that the focus is put in microtasks. Microtasks are:
* The ones that do not need more than 120 minutes to be achieved
* Can be fully performed online
* Can be done by people not necessarily connected in a formal way to one organization, be it staff or volunteer
Some examples can be: looking for information on the Internet, translating some pages, transcripting some short documents, brainstorming for the creation of a logo, writing a short story, designing a campaign, recommending some bibliography, doing surveys, photo editing, viral marketing, recruiting members, etc.
The site, really at a beta stage, does need some tweaking — like how being noticed of new microtasks in your area of expertise — but the idea is excellent. Kudos to Fundación Bip-Bip!
More info