Archive for the ‘Rising Voices’ Category

Ceasefire Liberia : un livre, un film documentaire et maintenant un blog

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

Si Foko ne faisait pas partie de l’extraordinaire communauté Rising Voices, vous n’auriez connu du Libéria que son histoire à travers la terrible guerre civile et sa luttle contre la pauvreté. Aujourd’hui le projet Ceasefire Liberia vous offre une toute autre image du pays et de la réalité qu’affronte sa population. Vraisemblablement les stéréotypes changent au fur et à mesure que vous plongez dans les blogs de ces talentueux journalistes et activistes. Voici le chemin que vous devrez suivre (sans avoir à quitter votre ordinateur) pour voyager à travers les mots et les vidéos de Ceasefire Liberia :


*photo by Andre Lambertson

Durant les 14 ans de guerre civile qui a déchiré le Liberia, des familles furent séparées par la brutalité des groupes rebelles. À la fin de la guerre en 2003, les Libériens eurent à reconstruire le pays mais aussi leurs vies. Certains sont revenus vivre dans leur communauté d’autres sont restés à l’extérieur dans la Diaspora. La plupart ont refait leur vie à Park Hill dans le Staten Island aux États-Unis où se trouve la plus grande communauté hors du Libéria.

Ceasefire Liberia est un projet multimédia qui vise à documenter l’expérience des deux côtés de l’océan. Il y a eu un livre, un film documentaire et maintenant un blog. L’objectif de ce blog est de connecter ces deux populations. La Diaspora et le reste du pays afin de créer un dialogue entre ceux qui ont fui la guerre et ceux qui l’ont subie.

Découvrez la vie en Mongolie avec Nomad Green

Saturday, November 28th, 2009

C’est plus tôt cette année que nous découvrîmes les nouveaux projets de Rising Voices et leurs super bloggers. De toutes les latitudes nous partageons le même activisme et la même passion pour transmettre des histoires et des expériences auxquells nous n’aurions pas accès si nous nous limitons aux autoroutes de l’information tradionnelles. Voici une des meilleures façons de découvrir les bloggers de Mongolie, Nomad Green :

Lisez ce récit d’une ie partagée entre ruralité et urbanité :

cowboy

This boy is helping his parent’s work without any comments by others. It is a normal his working day. Nevertheless, his parent does not suppose about his assistance, nor they do not think it must be do by him. This is not the same in line with child labor exploitation. On the other hand, it is good experience to make child to do by themselves. When we were a child, we can do many things by ourselves. Therefore, we have lesson learnt and experience that can help us to transfer a new market system. We could change our old behavior through our working skill and experience.

Recently, our young parents do not like to do any thing by their children. We have a lot of possibility to teach our generation in the urban. Example; we will teach them to no litter in the street; if you see rubbish you pick up and put it a near garbage box. And you keep in clean your entrance… so on. If playground’s toys have broken, children can fix it through their skills.

Ce garçon aide ses parents sans aucune remarque des autres. C’est normal de le voir travailler tous les jours. En plus ses parents ne doutent pas de sa participation aux travaux et ne pensent pas non plus qu’il devrait s’y attacher. Il ne s’agit pas de la même chose que l’exploitation des enfants par le travail. D’un autre côté, c’est une bonne chose que l’enfant sache faire les choses de liu-mçeme. De cette façon il aura appris par l’expérience et saura transférer son savoir-faire d’après un nouveau système. Nous pourrons ainsi changer nos anciennes habitudes d’après notre expérience et nos capacités.

De nos jours, les jeunes parents n’aiment pas que leurs enfants s’appliquent de tâches. Nous avons beaucoup plus de possiblités denvoyer nos enfants se faire éduquer dans les villes. Par example :Nous leur apprendrons à ne pas salir par terre, s’il trouve un déchet qu’il le ramasse. De toujours nettoyer les devantures…ainsi de suite.  Si les jouets sont cassés, les enfants peuvent les réparer avec leurs talents.

Je me suis amusée à comparer ce texte avec les articles de Koloina et Patrick eux-mêmes fervents défenseurs de l’enfance à Madagascar.

Koloina avait filmé les travux du talentueux Toky qui construit des modèles de jouets en conserves pour ses amis. Il est ingénieux mais surtout représente la débrouillardise de l’enfance malgache.

koloina for afrigadget

Patrick a pris cette photo et refuse que l’enfance malgache prenne cette voie.

Please don’t judge a book by its cover, I mean it’s true that there is some part of Tamatave is very dirty like you see in the picture but there is also a very wonderful place and clean as well. Actually I want make sure that you won’t judge all Tamatave’s children, because NOT all of them is doing like what he did. He’s like an exception. It’s too rare to see somebody doing like what he is doing especially in the open air like this. He saw me to take his picture but he didn’t want even to care about me. That’s means that he is already used to do it. Right? Do you have an idea of who might be guilty in this situation? Have fun with picture but please don’t forget to comment. Who is guilty????

Merci Rising Voices !

The Soul of the #NewMachine Human Rights Conference Recap from a Madagascar Viewpoint

Monday, May 11th, 2009

On May 4-5 2009, the Human Rights Center at University of California Berkeley organized the Soul of the New Machine Conference on Human Rights, technology and new media to share best practices and develop new strategies for incorporating technology to address human rights abuses. A few partners and friends were part of the panel of presenters, among them Ken Banks of FrontlineSMS, Erik Hersman of Ushahidi and David Sasaki, director of Global Voices Outreach program, Rising Voices.

I will go into further details later on how these three organisations have been of tremedous help in documenting the multiple acts of violence during the Madagascar crisis but for more info now, here is an interview by Solana Larsen of Tahina, one of the manager of the foko-ushahidi platform in Antananarivo, Mg.

A New York Hub for the conference was also organized by Cristina Moon and she graciously invited Foko to present their work at the brooklyn location.

As you know, Foko primary mission is to document the everyday lives of Malagasy citizens and local agents of environmental change, not record potential human rights violations by their government. Yet, the ongoing crisis decided otherwise for the time being. The hub was a great opportunity to meet and learn first hand from Human Rights activists present at the event.

The presentation went over the background of the crisis, the known human rights violations that were documented since January 09, the use of new media by tools by the dynamic new media users’ community in Madagascar (both related and non-related to Foko) and the obstacles for more extensive reporting of current events. We also posit that among all the past and current human rights violations in Madagascar ( military repression, limited freedom of speech, arrest etc..) the most glaring offense in our views is the 400,000 people (mostly children) currently at risk of hunger in the South because the political deadlock prevents an effective response.

The fact that Foko is present in 5 different regions of Madagascar is important but still insufficient to provide comprehensive reports from all the regions of a nation twice the size of Great-Britain.

The Conference had a specific emphasis on data accuracy, fact-checking and the use of mobile reporting. Michael Ferola present at the NY hub, has been very kind to offer an analysis of the entire database collected on the foko ushahidi platform. We are evaluating a way to measure the quality of the data and present them in an effective manner.

The videos of the panel discussions at the conference will soon be available on fora.tv

However, here a few important reviews made at the conference:

1)On the panel “PDAs and Phones for Data Collections”, speakers discuss the potential of mobile reporting for providing additional information during humanitarian crises in developing countries. For more info, here is the notes from Erik’s talk at the conference and a post on Kiwanja website on how FrontlineSMS was used in the film “The Reckoning”.
No groundbreaking news here so I will take this opportunity to describe the collaboration with mobile technology experts and thank the people at FrontlineSMS and Ushahidi who worked with us overnight to get the platform ready for sms reports as soon as possible.

As Tahina explained, there were a few obstacles to overcome but FrontlineSMS developpers ( Alex Anderson, Carlos Genz and Ken Banks) provided timely technical support and sped up the release of a new version they were working on to take into account the urgent need for an SMS/computer interface for the Madagascar crisis. We cannot thank them enough for helping us establish the first project to collect SMS reports directly onto a computer via the intelliSMS software.
The Ushahidi team was also tremendous in setting up the platform quickly and showing us how to modify the interface to allow for the translation of key words, categories and timeline.

2) on the panel “Blogging Human Rights”, David Sasaki spoke about the internet tools used to shine a light on issues that media often ignored. He also explained the importance of giving people on site during the opportunity to tell their stories in their own words and stop using proxy as voices for the oppressed. He also emphasized the importance of translation in breaking the “echo chamber” and reaching new audiences about issues that most people are not familiar with. A case in point for this statement that is related to Madagascar is the online petition for Razily, a protester who was arrested on March 28th for flag theft and who has not been heard of since then. The petition has now reached moe than 500 signatures in a week thanks to media attention in different languages (ny marina momba ny Razily news2dago, Madagascar-Tribune, Ethan Zuckerman, Jillian York on Huffington Post and Madagaskar-Vision.de) For the ultimate comprehensive resource on translation and new media, read Chris Salzberg’s thesis on the lingua GV project. (PDF)

Finally, David also emphasized the importance of addressing the safety of citizen journalists

In short, the conference was a reminder that supporting the development of new media users and communities in developing countries is a worthwhile endeveaor, especially considering their added value when a crisis situation breaks out.

Nouvelles communautés d’Activistes et Journalistes de Rising Voices :

Saturday, April 25th, 2009

Il y a quelques semaines, Rising Voices a annoncé les nouvelles additions à la dynamique communauté. Il s’agit d’individus venant de pays dont nous aurions tous aimé qu’ils obtiennent l’attention médiatique et culturelle qu’ils méritent et nous ferons de notre mieux pour les supporter.

Former les Femmes aux nouveaux médias au Yemen :

Ghaida’a al-Absi de Hand in Hand Initiative va inviter les femmes politiques et activistes à partager un nouveau point de vue sur leur pays à traver les outils du Média Citoyen. Elle encouragera par la suite des ONG à rejoindre la discussion afin de marquer un changement dans la communauté. Ghaida nous explique tout cela dans cet interview prise par Rezwan : http://rising.globalvoicesonline.org/blog/2009/04/08/video-interview-with-ghaidaa-al-absi/ et visitez la page du projet : http://rising.globalvoicesonline.org/projects/empowerment-of-women-activists-in-media-techniques-yemen/

Nomad Green Mongolie :

Vous sauriez un peu plus sur la Mongolie grâce aux actions des ONG locales qui viendront nous informer à travers leurs blogs sur l’état environnementale dans ce pays de l’Asie . En attendant le lancement des ateliers, informez-vous sur leur site et tenez-vous prêts à les commenter : http://www.nomadgreen.org/?lang=en avec un nouvel outil de cartographie en ligne  : Nomad Green Map Tools

map5

Ceasefire Liberia :

Sans nul doute la communauté de journalistes la plus prometteuse et ambitieuse car elle réunit des talentueux représentants de la presse écrite mais aussi des radios et télévisions dans ce pays qui souffre d’extrême pauvreté et qui essaye de guérir ses plaies de la guerre civile. N’attendez pas ils ont déjà ouverts plus d’une vingtaine de blogs!

Nat

Nat Bayjay qui blogue sur http://natlyn.wordpress.com/

Real Experience of the Digital Era  – Chine

Nous avons beaucoup de la Chine mais en même temps des Chinois eux-mêmes très peu . Dans la province du Lianoning, Shenyang City, sera le coeur de la communauté  des travailleuses du sexe qui nous partageront leur quotidien par des vidéos et des articles de blogs : http://rising.globalvoicesonline.org/projects/real-experience-of-the-digital-era/

Abidjan BlogCamp

Sera animé par des jeunes de quartiers de la grande mégapole d’Abidjan et sera la 3è communauté francophone de Rising Voices (Congo AIDS Right fait dèjà un excellent travail). Les blogs Camps commencent d’ici peu…

 

Updates on the Foko/Ushahidi & twitter crisis report initiative

Friday, March 13th, 2009

Amidst increasing concerns over the political instability in Madagascar and the safety of local news reporters, citizen media has made an important  contribution to the understanding and documentation of on-site based reports.  As the crisis has spread out all over a nation whose  surface area is the equivalent to France, Belgium and the Netherlands combined, reporters cannot be present everywhere so eye-witness accounts from citizens have become increasingly valuable.

Ushahidi has launched an open source platform for the crisis in Madagascar. The Ushahidi tool will allow Madagascar based individuals to send information on incidents via SMS messages to the geospatial friendly Ushahidi platform. As you may have seen in the current political crisis, especially during the unrest of January 26, when no news from the traditional media were available, information came in through new social media tools. Ushahidi will help gather all the information, confirmed and unconfirmed, and help visualize it on a map.  The number for sending SMS to Ushahidi in Madagascar is 00447800000197.

The initial soft release of the platform (web based reports only) was due to concern over our ability to properly receive  mobile reports. The concern is now corrected and a steady amount of mobile reports have been submitted for the past week from all over the country.  The latest unrest over the past 5 days were heavily reported by citizen bloggers via either sms reports or twitter updates: on average,  one  update every 3 hours were received.

The twitter aggregation can still be optimized as we are still not collecting all the potential reports available and the cost of sending tweets via mobile is too high.

We are also still very concerned about the safety of citizen media users in this increasingly tense political environment and considering the options to enhance the safety of contributors to citizen media.

(fr) Apprenez des journalistes de …Rising Voices

Sunday, November 30th, 2008

Tout récemment la communauté s’est étendue à deux nouveaux groupes qui ont la particularité de se situer dans des pays très riches culturellement et qui sont formés de journalistes! Apprenez du métier qu’ils mènent, de leur conversion dans le blogging et surtout de leur activisme : 

Serbian Web Journalism School (English page) l’école de web journalisme serbe fait maintenant partie de la famille de Rising Voices et nous vous invitons à découvrir leurs blogs bientôt.

Le Liberia est le 6è pays du continent africain à être représenté mais cette fois-ci par des journalistes de très haut niveau. Animateurs radio et presse écrite se rejoignent pour répandre la démocratie dans leur pays :

prise chez Rising Voices.