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[Nettime-nl] News about Networks workshop (De Balie, 21-24 juni) |
Making Issues into Rights? exploring the depth of "Rights" and "Justice" networks The News about Networks workshop by the Govcom.org Foundation, Amsterdam. 21-24 June 2004 de Balie Center for Culture and Politics Kleine-Gartmanplantsoen 10 (Leidseplein) Amsterdam Workshop site: http://www.issuenetwork.org All queries: Catherine Somze, govcom.org workshop producer, catherine@issuenetwork.org A Govcom.org co-production with de Balie, with support from the Media, Arts & Culture Unit within the Ford Foundation's Knowledge, Creativity & Freedom Program. A limited number of Ford Fellowships available (see below). Workshop Introduction The Govcom.org Foundation, Amsterdam is organizing a workshop for public interest groups, advocates, activists as well as academics researching media justice as well as communications and information rights. The workshop is dedicated to exploratory analysis into the depth of the communication between and among these networks. The Govcom.org Foundation creates and hosts political tools for the Web. Over a four-day period, the workshop will provide an immersion experience in Govcom.org's work in the specially constructed media laboratory at de Balie Center for Culture and Politics, Amsterdam. All participants will be invited to use state of the art information tools created by govcom.org and its collaborators. The participants also are invited to present and share their own tools and information. Much of the workshop will revolve around using the Issue Crawler, server-side software, developed with OneWorld International (London), Aguidel (Paris) and Recognos (Cluj-Napoca) that locates, analyses and visualises networks on the Web. We also will make use of novel techniques to monitor and analyse the news through Google News and RSS readers. Textual, semantic and other data analyses may be undertaken. Some of the questions one may ask are: - What are my networks? What is my relative standing within these networks? - Which types of organizations, agendas and terms dominate these networks? - Do the organizations in these networks recognize each other's work and issues? - Which parts of the networks hold together if one takes out funders? Do they hold together if one takes out other agenda-setters, be it (big) media or intergovernmental organizations? Workshop Substance The migration of 'rights' into more and more issue spaces may be attributed to the roominess of the Universal Declaration, the successes of the human rights field as well as the urgent issue re-formatting work occurring regularly in NGO networks. NGOs, instead of getting their issues from the news, are continually migrating across issue networks, forming partnerships with other actors and terms. "Justice" and "rights" are two of the more recent issue reformulations, with the coinage of such notions as communication rights, information rights, Internet rights, media justice and information justice. The health of an issue, and the network forming around it, could well be gauged by an issue's migratory patterns. When and why do NGOs reformulate and attach themselves to issues? In particular, we are interested in the implications of making issues into rights issues. What are the consequences for NGOs and their issues by choosing the rights frame? Is such issue work temporary, context-specific, or opportunistic? Are 'rights' organizing new networks or destabilizing current networks? Movements of issues across networks may have further consequences. Do issues decline without specific terminological innovation? Does the movement towards 'rights', in particular, prompt human rights to defend its issue space against intruders? When is an organization taken seriously by the issue space it wishes to join? Can new rights and justice networks prosper without the human rights network? News about Networks Workshop series The Communication Rights and Media Justice workshop is the second in series. The first News about Networks workshop has been dedicated to understanding whether NGOs may operate effectively without a commercial press strategy. Does the rise of NGO Internet-based networks, in particular, imply an end to the reliance on the press to resonate the message? Can networks alone mobilize other organizations and key players to act on important social issues of the day? In short, can NGOs do without news? The workshop proceedings, entitled "All-American Issues: Seven Stories from the Homeland," are available at http://www.issuenetwork.org/node.php?id=46. De Balie's workshop URL: http://www.debalie.nl/artikel.jsp?articleid=4473&podiumid=media%3Cbr%20/%3e The News about Networks is part of a larger workshop program, "The Life of Issues," at http://www.govcom.org/workshops.html. Workshop Format The format of the workshop intersperses the following: 1) Introduction and Software Training 2) Talks and Demonstrations by the Participants and Analysts 3) Software Use and Feedback on Findings 4) Designer Map-making 5) Individual Analysis and Presentations of Results 6) Discussions of texts from the Reader The media laboratory has facility for laptops with wireless and cabled Internet connectivity. Bring your computer. The workshop begins promptly on Monday, 21 June at 10am. The workshop concludes with a public presentation on Thursday, 24 June at 8pm. The workshop organizer is Richard Rogers. Workshop Key words Alternative media Communications rights Community media Democratic media Freedom of expression Freedom of information Independent media Information commons Information justice Information rights Media and democracy Media and globalization Media justice Media regulation Mission-driven media Privacy Radical media Software patents Technology standards Workshop Applications To apply, please send a biographical sketch, a one-page description of the questions and themes you would like to see addressed at the workshop as well as the answers to the questionnaire below. Please send all three items to participant@issuenetwork.org by 1 May 2004. The answers to the questionnaire allow for the advance mapping of the issue areas. The criteria of acceptance to the workshop are the mutual fit between the applicant's analytical desires and expectations, and the capacities of the analysts on hand. Workshop Fee: The workshop fee is ?275. Ford Fellowships available The Ford Foundation has made five fellowships available for the workshop. The fellowship is available only for U.S.-based advocates, activists and academics and covers travel, accommodation and workshop fee. Applicants should work in one or more of the following areas: Communications rights Community media Freedom of expression Information justice Information rights Media and democracy Media justice Press freedom Privacy Software patents Technology standards To apply for a Ford Fellowship, please send a biographical sketch, a one-page description of the questions and themes you would like to see addressed at the workshop as well as the answers to the questionnaire below. Please send all three items to fellowship@issuenetwork.org by 20 April 2004. Questionnaire (in english, en Franais, en espanol, auf Deutsch) All workshop participants are asked to submit answers to the following questions. 1. Name your issue/research area(s), e.g., Climate Change, Media Justice, Indigenous Rights, Ancient Forests, Spectrum Policy, low-power FM. 2. Name the most significant organizations per issue area(s), along with their Web addresses (URLs). Please separate URLs with a comma, and use 'deep pages' wherever possible, i.e., http://www.greenpeace.org/international_en/campaigns/intro?campaign%5fid=3938 (the Greenpeace Ancient Forests page), instead of www.greenpeace.org 3. List the most significant sub-issues, terms, slogans, individual names per issue. 4. List the 3-5 most important conferences in each issue area, for the past year, the current year and next year, along with the web addresses (URLs). 5. List the 3-5 most significant web-accessible documents in the issue area(s). Provide the exact web addresses for each document. 6. List (no more than 10) the organizations in that issue area(s) that you have had the most direct email contact with in the past 6-12 months. 7. List the most significant news sources for your work and the web locations for these sources. *Please return the answers to the questionnaire to participant@issuenetwork.org. We kindly request that you return the answers in english as well as your own language.
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