Tactic: Online Video Protest in (Virtual) Tunisia
Written by Mary on May 27, 2008 – 5:19 pm -
You can see a larger version of the video on the Nawaat site.
Description: In 2007, the Tunisian government, led by President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, blocked the video-sharing site DailyMotion.com, in part because the site hosted video testimony of Tunisian political prisoners. In response, the human rights organization Nawaat has created an online video protest on Google Earth. If you visit the Tunisian presidential palace on Google Earth, you will see that it is covered with links to the same videos of political prisoners which President Ben Ali was trying to block (see video above). Now, at least online, evidence of Tunisia’s political prisoners are right in the President’s front yard!
Organizer: Nawaat (”the core”), a Tunisian human rights site, co-founded by Tunisian digital activist Sami Ben Gharbia, creator of the video above.
Purpose of Action: To show President Ben Ali that he cannot censor the truth about Tunisian political prisoners, that the truth will come right to his front door.
Organizing Tools: Google Earth, YouTube
Outcome: Unknown.
Ease of Replication: Pretty easy. You can add the Google Earth video geo-tags through YouTube. when you upload a video to YouTube you have the option to specify the date and the location of the video. When you click on that option, you will find a Google map which you can zoom in on. Then you place the geo-tag marker on the location you want the video to be associated with, in this case, the Tunisian presidential palace in Carthage. You can also place the geo-tag marker by inputting the longitude and latitude of the location. There is such easy interactivity between Google Earth, Google Maps, and YouTube because all three applications are owned by Google.
Tags: dailymotion, geotagging, google, googleearth, nawaat, politicalprisoners, tunisia, youtube
Posted in Mashups, Mid-East & N. Africa, Tactics, Video | No Comments »
Tactic: Mapping Xenophobic Attacks in South Africa
Written by Simon on May 23, 2008 – 10:32 pm -Description: United for Africa is a South African web site that records reports of violence sent by SMS and e-mail on a Google Earth map. It provides living testimony to the atrocities committed during the xenophobic riots of May 2008 in South Africa. United for Africa is build upon the engine of Kenyan riot-tracking site Ushahidi.
Organizer: Quirk, a web marketing agency in Cape Town is leading this charge. Quirk will act as administrators on this build, and the Ushahidi team will step away from it as soon as the build is done.
Purpose of Action: To create a visual map of human rights abuses.
Organizing Tools: SMS, Google Earth, web site
Outcome: The xenophobic riots in South Africa are still continuing.
Ease of Replication: It is rather difficult to replicate the Ushahidi map, but their authors offer help to interested activists. United for Africa is actually the second rip-off build upon the Ushahidi engine after Sokwanele from Zimbabwe. The initiators of Ushahidi are developing their project as a free and open source tool for crowdsourcing crisis information and then visualizing that on a map. They hope that they will soon be able to provide this tool for any national or international conflict. To reach that goal they are still seeking for more developers.

via White African
Tags: Google Maps, SMS, South Africa, United for Africa, ushahidi
Posted in Mashups, Mobile Phones, Sub-Saharan Africa, Tactics | No Comments »
Resource: Digital Activism for the Environment
Written by Mary on May 12, 2008 – 9:10 pm -Title: Green Global Voices: Web 2.0 Environmental Activism
Author: Juliana Rotich, editor of Green Global Voices
Published by: Reuters Blog (2008)
What is it?: A detailed post reviewing how activists are using digital tools to protect the environment. Featured tools include blogs and video, Flickr, data mashups, and mobile phones.
Tags: environment, green
Posted in Blogs, Guides & Resources, Mashups, Mobile Phones, Video | No Comments »
Tactic: Zimbabwe Election Watch Map
Written by Mary on March 31, 2008 – 12:57 am -Description: This mashup overlays a Google map of Zimbabwe with information about breaches in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) Principles and Guidelines Governing Democratic Elections* since July 2007.
Map URL: http://www.sokwanele.com/map/all_breaches
Organizer: Zimbabwe Election Watch, a project of the Zimbabwean movement blog www.Sokwanele.com
Purpose of Action: To make an accessible visual representation of complex longitudinal data about breaches in electoral standards.
Organizing Tools: Google maps, a blog
Outcome: Results of the March 29, 2008 election will be announced on Monday, March 31..
Ease of Replication: Creating a basic Google map with your own locations is pretty easy. Adding customizable icons and creating preferences that allow you to display only certain icons takes a little more skill.
Tags: elections, mashup, sokwanele, zimbabwe
Posted in Mashups, Sub-Saharan Africa | 3 Comments »
Guide: Designing an Advocacy Video
Written by Mary on March 16, 2008 – 10:44 pm -All the cool digital tools in the world aren’t much help without an effective strategy. Posts in the new “Strategy” topic will present ideas for how to fit digital tools into your overarching strategy for change.
In this first post, we will present a strategy for designing a YouTube-style video to promote your cause. A good advocacy video should contain the following elements:
1. Start With Background Info
Assume the person viewing the video knows nothing about your cause. You need to tell the viewer who, what, when, why, and where of the cause you are fighting for. The goal of presenting this information is for the person to understand the injustice that has occurred and why action is needed.
There are two options for presenting this information: slides and voice-over. If you are using slides, just type the information (white text on a back background looks nice). Then animate the slides. For voice-over, you need to write a script of the information and then record it and layer the audio over the video. The slides option is easier as you do not need to edit the audio track.
- EXAMPLE: Video Denouncing Homophobia
This video denounces the homophobic statements of Sally Kern, an elected representative from the state of Oklahoma in the USA. The first 33 seconds show the use of black-and-white slides to give background information about the issue. Specifically: Who? a State Legislator. What? a speech delivered at a gathering in her district. When? (doesn’t say) Why? she thought only 50 people were listening to her speech. Where? the state of Oklahoma. Read more »
Tags: censorship, homophobia, imprisonment, morocco, racism, saudiarabia, tunisia, USA
Posted in Americas, Guides & Resources, Mashups, Mid-East & N. Africa, Video | 5 Comments »
Tactic: SMS/Map Mashup Protects Human Rights in Kenya
Written by Mary on January 10, 2008 – 11:03 pm -Description: Ushahidi.com is a Kenyan web site that records reports of violence sent by SMS and e-mail on a Google Earth map. It provides living testimony to the atrocities committed following the recent presidential elections in that country. (”Ushahidi” means “testimony” in Kiswahili.)
Organizer: The idea for the Ushahidi web site was created by the bloggers behind KenyanPundit.com, WhiteAfrican.com, MentalAcrobatics.com, AfroMusing.com, and Skunkworks and was built by developer David Kobia.
Purpose of Action: To create a visual map of human rights abuses.
Organizing Tools: SMS, Google Earth, web site
Outcome: A political resolution to the election crisis has not yet been reached.
Ease of Replication: Replicating the Ushahidi map is rather difficult, as it is actually a mash-up of SMS messages and a Google map. You will need a developer friend to make it. However, other digital map applications, like Frappr, are quite easy to use.
Tags: africa, google, googleearth, kenya, mobile, SMS, subsaharanafrica
Posted in Mashups, Sub-Saharan Africa, Tactics | 1 Comment »
Tactic: Protecting Whales with Digital Maps
Written by Mary on January 8, 2008 – 12:33 am -Organizer: Greenpeace
Purpose of Action: To make the protection of whales a global effort by allowing activists to track the migration of 20 humpback whales online in order to ensure that they are not killed by whalers.
Organizing Tools: web site with digital map
Outcome: Japan has agreed not to hunt humpback whales this year (though other whales are still in danger)
Ease of Replication: Replicating the Greenpeace whale map is quite difficult, but other digital map applications, like Frappr, are quite easy to use.
Tags: environmentalism, frappr, greenpeace, maps, Tactics, whales, whaling
Posted in Mashups, Tactics | No Comments »




