1 / 14

NetAktibismo: Online and Offline

NetAktibismo: Online and Offline. ICTs and Social Transformation in the Philippines. A.G. Alegre/Foundation for Media Alternatives Asia Internet Rights Conference/Seoul 8-10 November. Roadmap. Context : Strategic ICT Agenda and Role of Civil Society/Social Movements

tyra
Download Presentation

NetAktibismo: Online and Offline

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NetAktibismo: Online and Offline ICTs and Social Transformation in the Philippines A.G. Alegre/Foundation for Media Alternatives Asia Internet Rights Conference/Seoul 8-10 November

  2. Roadmap • Context: Strategic ICT Agenda and Role of Civil Society/Social Movements • Social Movements Weave the Web: ICTs for Social Transformation in the Philippines – 3 cases • NetActivism in the ouster of Estrada • CSO Community Site Building • Civil Society Engagement in ICT Policy • Initial Learnings: Implications for Social Activists AGAlegre/FMA 2001

  3. Context Philippines in Transition • Painful transition from dictatorship to full democracy: EDSA1/2 & beyond • Economic stagnation and persistence of poverty & underdevelopment • Role of civil society organizations & social movements AGAlegre/FMA 2001

  4. Context ICTs for Empowerment & Development • CSOs between “the hope and the hype” • Digital Inclusion: connnectivity, capacity, content • CSOs & social movements as “info-mediaries” AGAlegre/FMA 2001

  5. NetAktibismo: 3 Cases ICT initiatives for Social Transformation • NetAktibismo in the ouster of President Erap Estrada • CSO Community Website Building • (Civil Society Engagement in ICT Policy Development) AGAlegre/FMA 2001

  6. NetAktibismo 1 NetAktibismo in ouster of Erap • Context: corruption and economic plunder cases culmination of political leadership crisis leading to broad campaign: R I O • CSOs and social movements at the forefront of awareness-raising, organizing and mobilization • “EDSA II” ousted Erap on 20 Jan 2001 after 18 months in power AGAlegre/FMA 2001

  7. NetAktibismo 1 ICT-based Interventions • E-Mail/Mailing Lists • WWWeb-based: websites • Offline mobilizations by online activists • SMS/Cell Phone activism AGAlegre/FMA 2001

  8. NetAktibismo 1 E-Mail & Mailing Lists • More than 60 mailing lists: E-Groups • E-lagda (110,000), KOMPIL2, neveragain.NET, oust-erapnow… • Main information dissemination tool: • Impeachment summaries and transcripts - compiled by KOMPIL or “lifted” from news sites (Inquirer, Business Day) • Wire service reports and news clippings • Posting of schedules of events (meetings, rallies) • Transmission of documents and photos (contents of the “second envelope”) • Interactive: discussion & debate AGAlegre/FMA 2001

  9. NetAktibismo 1 World Wide Web-Based: Sites • Websites: news & info sites, portals, Erap joke & parody sites, etc. • More than 200 anti-Erap sites emerged • From basic text-based sitesto multi-media sites (e.g. gifs & jpegs, streaming media) • INQ7.net reached 2M hits/day (majority ofhits come from abroad) AGAlegre/FMA 2001

  10. NetAktibismo 1 Offline Mobilizations by Online Activists • Online-Offline nexus > the case of E-Lagda(e-signature) list (110,000 members) • petitions & letter-writing campaigns sent/faxed to Malacanang, embassies abroad, foreign governments, Cabinet members • Delegations in rallies: internet-themed props, posters, T-shirts (Erap as “virus”, “Delete!”, etc.) • Mobilization of Overseas Filipinos: petitions, letters, embassy pickets AGAlegre/FMA 2001

  11. NetAktibismo 1 Cell Phones: SMS > Text Activism • New & powerful medium of social protest & mobilization: Short Message Systems/”Texting” • Short announcements (e.g. mass mob, meetings) • Alerts: troop movements, monitoring of meetings of Erap camp, (+ rumors) • Political jokes • Text campaigns (texting OP, senators, etc.) • Interface with the Web • At height of People Power II revolt: 160 million text messages a day! AGAlegre/FMA 2001

  12. NetAktibismo 1 ERAP ENTANGLED IN THE WEB AGAlegre/FMA 2001

  13. NetAktibismo 1: Learnings & Challenges • Affirmed ICTs are enabling tools for social change • E-mail is “weapon of choice”/killer app; + Text • from social protest to promoting citizenship, nation-building But: depends on who uses it, for what purpose • Lack of accessfuels creativity • Low PC/internet diffusion > Texting • Interphase between traditional-new-nextgen media • Net/Text activism mobilizes new constituencies • White collar workers/professional-managerial class • Youth: “generation text”, internet/cable TV generation • Overseas Filipinos: 7 million AGAlegre/FMA 2001

  14. NetAktibismo 1: Learnings & Challenges • Need to retool traditional constituencies • search for new modes of social organizing for new times • Need to renew ICT as Community Builder • Linking individual empowerment to social empowerment • C over I in ICT • Need to extend gains of the political revolt (middle class-based) to a longer lasting social “revolution” AGAlegre/FMA 2001

More Related