Title: Strengthening the pan African movement for social justice
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4Strengthening the pan African movement for social
justice
5- Fahamu has a vision of the world where people
organize to emancipate themselves from all forms
of oppression, recognize their social
responsibilities, respect each others
differences, and realize their full potential.
6Reputation
- Reputation for being a technology organisation
- We are not!
- We only use technologies as tool for what we want
to achieve
7Themes
- Strengthening capacity in human rights and
advocacy - Pambazuka News Platform for debate, analysis and
action for freedom and justice - Reaching wider communities
- Experiences in mobile phone technologies
- Pambazuka PressFrom digital to print (and back
again) - Blogs, social networking, twitter, etc building
Pambazuka 2.0 platform
8Strengthening capacity in human rights and
advocacy
- Learning for change program
9Origins
- Thought ICTs could help human rights training
- Research on gt100 organizationsin eight African
countries (1998) - Organizational needs and capacities
- Priorities and preoccupations
- Training needs and capacities
- Information and communications capacities
10Context
- Widespread violations of human rights
- Volatile, and sometimes hostile, political
environment
11Context
- Capable individuals but fragile organisations
- Heavy case loads and stressful work
- Unable to release staff for training
- Dichotomy of values
12Information and communications infrastructure
- Computers with CDROM capability
- Low specification machines (Win98)
- Email ubiquitous
- Low bandwidth
- WWW expensive, slow, frustrating
- Poor telephone connections
13Conventional courses
- Difficulty in releasing staff for extended
periods - Fragility of organizations
- Cost
- Non-returners
- Relevance to ongoing operations
14Workshops advantages
- Face to face human interface
- Interactive
- Exchange of experiences
- Short absences from work
- Networking
- Cost
15Workshops disadvantages
- Heterogeneity of knowledge and experience
- Little or no preparation by participants
- Limited depth and breadth
- Unknown long-term impact
- No post-workshop support
16Challenges for design
- How to ensure substantive training without long
absences from work? - How to overcome limits of workshop based
learning? - How do we ensure that training results in
strengthening of organization and not just of
individual?
17Learning for change model
18Learning for change model
19Learning for change model
20Choice of method
- Ease of editing and updating
- Faster production
- Enables search
- Automatic sitemap/ToC
- Bookmarking
- Incorporation of Flash
21CDROM features
- Fully interactive
- Feedback to user for exercises
- Stand-alone learning
- Reusable content
- Extensive resource centre of documents and other
resources
22CDROM features
- Strong designs
- Emphasis on aesthetics
- Simplicity
- Usability
- Focus on learning/content
- Can be used as course or reference
- Cross-platform Windows 98 MacOS9
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26Stand-alone learning
27Institutions with whom we have developed courses
University of Oxford
Office of UN High Commissioner for Human Rights
UN University for Peace
28Institutions with whom we have developed courses
UN Systems Staff College
Association for the Prevention of Torture
Article 19
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30Challenges
- Universal preference for print - no computers at
home, internet café problems at night, fieldwork
etc - Only minority of relatively well-endowed
organisations have access - Great demand from grassroots CBOs cant be met
through this approach
31In the end
- Decided not to develop CDROM materials further,
but instead focus on producing printed materials
for learning - and at some future date, when bandwidth
availability improves, maybe go to web-based
access
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33Pambazuka News
- Platform for debate, analysis and action for
freedom and justice - www.pambazuka.org
34Origins
- Origins in response to demand
- Debate, discussion, analysis, commentary
- Tool for advocacy, lobbying, and campaigning for
social justice - Platform for diverse views within framework of
struggle for social justice - Origins as newsletter only. After 4 years,
website set up!
35Results
- Readership
- Subscribers
- Use by other media
- Awards
- Text based email
- Low bandwidth website
36Example of use in advocacy
- AU Protocol on the Rights of Women in Africa
- Speed of ratification
- Lobbying at AU Summits by SOAWR
- Distribution of printed special issues
- Red, yellow and green cards
- Online petition
- Use of text messaging / SMS
37Success
- Due to direct face-to-face
- Internet great for disseminating to activists,
and raising public profile of campaign - Print more important for key audiences
38Widening the reach
- Podcasts and video
- Documentary films
- Radio programmes
- Soap operas
39Challenges
- lt7 Africans have access to internet
- Predominantly in urban areas
- Nowhere near a mass phenomenon
- 80 subscribers say they print out Pambazuka News
for reading
40Pressures
- To produce printed magazine / newspaper
- To make printed copies of thematic articles
available - To publish books
- And
- To make use of new media, social networking and
further use of ICTs
41Experiences of using mobile phone technologies
- Texting for womens rights
- Online petition, signing using SMS
- Contribution of text messaging - minimal of 5000
signatories, 454 from mobile phones (lt10) - Yet impact huge owing to novelty value - sexy
thing to do - But why so few text messages?
42Experiences of using mobile phone technologies
- SMS for farmer support
- Short experiment
- Very limited use of text messaging
- Lots of messages sent out by project, but very
few responses from farmers - Why?
43Experiences of using mobile phone technologies
- Campaign on domestic violence - KZN
- 30 prevalence
- Minimal reporting of cases
- Collaboration with paralegal network
- BulkSMS system set up and paid for
- 83 households said they had mobile phones
- 80 knew how to send/receive SMS
44Campaign on domestic violence - KZN
- After one year, doubling in number of cases
reported to paralegal offices - Celebrations that project was successful
- But women sent less than 100 messages throughout
the whole year! - Why?
- Evidence suggests it was the 12 workshops that
made the difference not the mobile phones
45Mobile phones constraints
- Cost of text messaging .20 -.50 per message cf
1-2 / day income - Poor pay more per unit than rich because poor use
pay-as-you-go. Inequity of user charges - cf
Water, Electricity etc - Ownership of phones in rural areas predominantly
men, even though women use them too
46Experiences of others in Africa
- Ushahidi - Election violence
- Election monitoring
- Organising protests etc
- Rallying voters
- Work because there is pre-existing network of
activists.
47Mobile phone - the great solution?
- Penetration rate claimed to be 30 according to
mobile phone companies - But because multiple networks in most countries
with premium charges across networks, tendency
for middle classes to have at least 2, if not 4
phones - Actual penetration rates may be about 10
- Could be transformative if charges dropped to
reflect actual costs (effectively zero)
48From digital to print
- From accidental publisher of books to becoming a
formal publisher of progressive pan African books - Pambazuka Press www.pambazukapress.org
49 and back again
- ebooks
- Print on demand technologies
50Concluding remarks
- Technology as a complement, not substitute for
social interaction - Tendency for technologies to amplify and
exacerbate social differentiation - Technology is not neutral it reflects the power
of those who use it - not always for good - ICTs powerful those with economic power are
rendered more powerful because of their access
conversely, those without access rendered more
powerless
51Concluding remarks
- Tendency for us to fetishize ICTs - i.e. imbue
inanimate objects with power and abilities. - Need to recognise social nature of technology
technology not a thing but an expression of a
social relation
52Concluding remarks
- Greatest power of ICTs lies in ability of people
to give voice to their own experiences and to
play a more sigificant role in determining their
own destiny. - By allowing technology to amplify social
differentiation, those with access increasingly
determine the destiny of the majority who dont
have access.
53Concluding remarks
- In a sense, ICTs have strong anti-democratic
tendencies that need to be consciously militated
against. - Otherwise those with power will end up more
powerful
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