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Strengthening the pan African movement for social justice

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Title: Strengthening the pan African movement for social justice


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Strengthening the pan African movement for social
justice
  • Challenges of using ICTs

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  • 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.

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Reputation
  • Reputation for being a technology organisation
  • We are not!
  • We only use technologies as tool for what we want
    to achieve

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Themes
  • 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

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Strengthening capacity in human rights and
advocacy
  • Learning for change program

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Origins
  • 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

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Context
  • Widespread violations of human rights
  • Volatile, and sometimes hostile, political
    environment

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Context
  • Capable individuals but fragile organisations
  • Heavy case loads and stressful work
  • Unable to release staff for training
  • Dichotomy of values

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Information and communications infrastructure
  • Computers with CDROM capability
  • Low specification machines (Win98)
  • Email ubiquitous
  • Low bandwidth
  • WWW expensive, slow, frustrating
  • Poor telephone connections

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Conventional courses
  • Difficulty in releasing staff for extended
    periods
  • Fragility of organizations
  • Cost
  • Non-returners
  • Relevance to ongoing operations

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Workshops advantages
  • Face to face human interface
  • Interactive
  • Exchange of experiences
  • Short absences from work
  • Networking
  • Cost

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Workshops disadvantages
  • Heterogeneity of knowledge and experience
  • Little or no preparation by participants
  • Limited depth and breadth
  • Unknown long-term impact
  • No post-workshop support

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Challenges 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?

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Learning for change model
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Learning for change model
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Learning for change model
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Choice of method
  • Ease of editing and updating
  • Faster production
  • Enables search
  • Automatic sitemap/ToC
  • Bookmarking
  • Incorporation of Flash

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CDROM features
  • Fully interactive
  • Feedback to user for exercises
  • Stand-alone learning
  • Reusable content
  • Extensive resource centre of documents and other
    resources

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CDROM 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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Stand-alone learning
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Institutions with whom we have developed courses
University of Oxford
Office of UN High Commissioner for Human Rights
UN University for Peace
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Institutions with whom we have developed courses
UN Systems Staff College
Association for the Prevention of Torture
Article 19
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Challenges
  • 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

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In 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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Pambazuka News
  • Platform for debate, analysis and action for
    freedom and justice
  • www.pambazuka.org

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Origins
  • 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!

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Results
  • Readership
  • Subscribers
  • Use by other media
  • Awards
  • Text based email
  • Low bandwidth website

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Example 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

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Success
  • Due to direct face-to-face
  • Internet great for disseminating to activists,
    and raising public profile of campaign
  • Print more important for key audiences

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Widening the reach
  • Podcasts and video
  • Documentary films
  • Radio programmes
  • Soap operas

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Challenges
  • 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

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Pressures
  • 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

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Experiences 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?

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Experiences 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?

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Experiences 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

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Campaign 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

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Mobile 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

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Experiences of others in Africa
  • Ushahidi - Election violence
  • Election monitoring
  • Organising protests etc
  • Rallying voters
  • Work because there is pre-existing network of
    activists.

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Mobile 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)

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From digital to print
  • From accidental publisher of books to becoming a
    formal publisher of progressive pan African books
  • Pambazuka Press www.pambazukapress.org

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and back again
  • ebooks
  • Print on demand technologies

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Concluding 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

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Concluding 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

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Concluding 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.

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Concluding 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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