Posts Tagged ‘conflict resolution’

[Session Proposal] Social Media for the Attention Age: The Peace Media Clearinghouse

Friday, December 4th, 2009

If the media production barriers of the one-to-many model of traditional media are disintegrating with the availability of the cheap, convenient, and dispersed many-to-many network of social media, then these technologies also provide new challenges to us as individuals and organizations.

  1. As media producers we are now empowered to produce social media capable of worldwide distribution, how do we broadcast a coherent message through the background noise and engage the appropriate audience in dialogue.
  2. But since we are also consumers of social media, and consumption possibilities remain stubbornly fixed (there are only so many hours in a day), how do we prevent this information abundance from becoming an information overload?  How do we access the information that is relevant, accurate, and timely to what we are trying to achieve?

One possible solution could be to provide a centralized hub for information recommended by our peers (and thus most likely to be personalized and relevant), moderated by authorities in the field for accuracy, and updated continually by a network of facilitators.

The Center of Innovation for Media, Conflict, and Peacebuilding at the U.S. Institute of Peace (USIP) is attempting to do just that with the Peace Media Clearinghouse.  This online resource provides a central site where educators, students, organizations, and the community of practitioners working in the conflict management field can access multimedia materials that support conflict analysis and prevention, conflict resolution, and post-conflict reconstruction and reconciliation.

Following a brief demonstration of this online resource, we’ll open up the discussion to explore how other individuals and organizations have addressed these same challenges.

Mass Mobilizers or Niche Networks?: Rethinking Social Media and Political Reform

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

In the wake of the 2009 Iranian elections, social media like Twitter created an ostensibly minute-by-minute news feed of events on the ground, with the #iranelection hashtag trending for weeks afterwards.  International media coverage of the event spoke of a “Twitter revolution,” and indeed, the theme of this Unconference is particularly pertinent in the context of such claims. When we look at ways to “use social media for good,” we must also be aware of the ways in which social media can either fail to create positive outcomes, or be utilized by the “bad guys.”

The US Institute of Peace’s Center of Innovation for Science, Technology, and Peacebuilding has been  has been examining this issue for some time and has been partnering with organziations like George Washington University, Harvard University’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society, Morningside Analytics, and Global Voices Online. While there’s clear evidence that social media can be beneficial for democracy and peace activists, there are challenges and downsides that must be taken into account, and we should approach the utility of social media with considerable skepticism.

Some points that should make us cautious about the causal connections we draw between social media and positive political outcomes:

1) These social media often tend to be the preserve of educated elite, especially in developing countries. Should we be skeptical of the grassroots political effects of a social media tool that is not widely adopted? At the time of the election, there were only 8500 Twitter users in Iran.

2) Repressive regimes are skilled at blocking internet access or other digital tools to their advantage. They can also rally their supporters to utilize social media tools to their own ends. For example, China employs it’s “50 cent army” to post pro-government blog and forum posts.

3) We should be wary of overstating the connections between online groups and actual collective action in repressive or violent contexts. The protests organized in opposition to the FARC in Colombia may have acted as a catalyst for large gatherings of people, but it is unlikely that many of the estimated 4.8 million Colombian protesters attended due to Facebook, since only 5% of Colombians actually use Facebook. Moreover, protests organized through social media in more repressive, violent contexts are bound to be problematic. Notifying pro-reform protesters of an upcoming rally on the streets of Cairo using a public space like Facebook can also notify the pro-government militias where they need to start violent crack-downs.

4) Social media can also socialize violent extremists, exposing them to a narrow set of messages that reinforce their existing ideas. They work to articulate partisan opinion in the same way that Fox News or MSNBC cater to the ideological leanings of their specific constituencies, only with more extreme results.

5) The potential insularity of online discourse can also undermine the cause of political reformers. When opposition groups are only talking amongst themselves, whether on the internet or otherwise, this diminishes their capacity to create broad, oppositional coalitions of the sort that are needed to trigger democratic transitions.

While the effects of social media need to be explored, these on-the-ground realities should give us pause. The limits of online discourse in the offline world should inform the way we formulate policy as we go forward.  These limits  should not diminish our enthusiasm for “using social media for good,” but they should temper our expectations.

Session Proposal: Face to Face in Cyberspace?: The Promise and Peril of “Digital Dialogue”

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

My name is Ethan Finley, I’m a graduate student at George Mason University, a self-identified peacebuilder, and a dialogue facilitator.  I’m also a bit of a Web 2.0 aficionado, and I am hopeful about using this vast sea of new technology to do conflict transformation work.  But, thinking about how to do this led me to the following series of dilemmas and questions….

It has long been axiomatic in the field of conflict resolution and peacebuilding that what is really necessary is to “get all the parties to the table” and to “talk things out face to face.”  Mediation and dialogue require a very intimate and delicate interface among human beings in tense and difficult circumstances.  Nevertheless, the variety of ways in which we socialize and connect is not only expanding exponentially in this new millennium, it is increasingly dependent upon electronics: email, social networking, blogging, internet chat, VOIP, online collaboration, etc.  To what extent can these new avenues of human contact be utilized to help resolve disputes, reinforce communities, manage change, and build peace?  Alternatively, is it even possible to conduct “digital dialogue” given the distance inherent in electronic communication?  And, if so, what technologies are best suited to this purpose, and how must facilitation and mediation practices by modified to fit the format?

I’m hoping for the input of as many of you, my colleagues, as possible, regardless of whether you have experience with “conflict resolution,” per se, or not.  Thank you, and I look forward to our own little dialogue here!

My blog: Instruments of Peace