Filed under Digital Activism, MAP by Kate Brodock on 3 August 2010 at 19:58
{no comments}
Clay really doesn’t need an introduction, does he? Even so, we’re really excited to have him. Clay has done more than any other public intellectual to explain the social and political effects of digital technology and to reveal its transformative possibilities. He is an influential author, teacher, and speaker, who has published Here Comes Everybody (2008) and Cognitive Surplus (2010). This year he is taking a hiatus from NYU’s Interactive Telecommunications Program to be the Edward R. Murrow Lecturer at the Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy and a Fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society.
The Meta-Activism Project seeks to better understand the phenomenon of digital activism not in order to define its inherent nature, but in order to make meaningful interventions to increase its effectiveness. We are not technological determinists, we are activists. We seek to understand so we can be more effective agents of change.
[Read More]
Filed under Digital Activism, MAP by Kate Brodock on 26 April 2010 at 14:19
{no comments}
In a post a few weeks ago, Mary started us down the path of “Ok, all this chatter about digital this and activism that. What constitutes digital activism anyway?” Obviously we’ve got to start thinking about this, or else MAP has no reason to exist, so let’s keep at it. Mary said, very rightly so:
“For digital activism to be a new field, the addition of digital technology to activism practice must be a change of kind not just degree.”
Are we creating a different type of activism is the question we have in front of us.
I want to push this discussion further, because I think there’s some good stuff nestled in this concept of degree vs kind.
If we think about it simply, most uses of digital technologies are amplifying existing processes:
- I can now reach 1000 people on Twitter with my 140 characters rather than the 50 I had on my email list serve.
- Friends of friends on Facebook can now see my posting, and can pass it along with the click of a mouse, rather than just my friends viewing something static.
- Geomapping technologies can now put me on my street, rather than in my by neighborhood.
And the examples go on. But I want to argue that, in fact, by increasing the degree of many of these actions, a new kind is often being created.
For the full post – and my really awesome napkins drawings – head over to the MAP Blog.
Filed under Digital Activism by Kate Brodock on 11 March 2010 at 18:22
{no comments}
The “alpha” Meta-Activism Project (MAP) website is up live now (very exciting!)….. I really love the snappy “It’s time to update activism strategy so it reflects our new digital reality.”
Really excited to be moving forward with this, with some wonderful folks.