Global Voices Online

Global Voices
Founded 2004, Berkman Center for Internet & Society
Focus Journalism
Area served
Global
Website globalvoices.org

Global Voices is an international network of bloggers, translators, and citizen journalists that follow, report, and summarize what is going on in the blogosphere. It is a non-profit project started by the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School that grew out of an international bloggers' meeting held in December 2004. The organization was founded by Ethan Zuckerman and Rebecca MacKinnon. In 2008 it became an independent non-profit incorporated in Amsterdam, Netherlands.

Objectives

When Global Voices was formed, Its objectives were: first, to enable and empower a community of "bridgebloggers" who "can make a bridge between two languages, or two cultures."[1] Second to develop tools and resources to make achieving the first objective more effective. It has maintained a working relationship with mainstream media. Reuters, for example, gave Global Voices an unrestricted grant in January 2006.[2] For its contribution to innovation in journalism, Global Voices was granted the 2006 Knight-Batten Grand Prize.[3] Global Voices was also recognized in 2009 with the University of Denver's Anvil of Freedom award for contributions to journalism and democracy.[4]

The organization now states its goals as to:

The organizations has a team of regional editors that aggregates and selects conversations from a variety of blogospheres, with a particular focus on non-Western and underrepresented voices.

Projects

Several projects have grown to become successful websites of their own with distinct communities.

Global Voices Advocacy

Global Voices Advox (formerly Advocacy) is an international network of bloggers and activists who fight for online free speech and track threats against "netizens". Advox were among the first to recognize arrests and killings of bloggers (starting in 2007) and were instrumental in helping to shift the focus of international media rights organizations to include online writers.

Rising Voices

Rising Voices seeks to empower under-represented communities to make their voices heard online by providing micro-grants to new projects; developing a series of participatory media tutorials; and cultivating a network of passionate citizen media activists. The first round of micro-grants were awarded in 2007 following a grant from Knight News Challenge Award.

Global Voices Lingua

Volunteers who wished to translate Global Voiced content from English into other languages formed Project Lingua in 2007.[6] Since then, translation has become central to Global Voices. As of May 2015, there are over 40 translation sites, and many publish original content that is translated into English rather than the other way around.

RuNet Echo

RuNet Echo’s main purpose is to expand and deepen understanding of the Russian Internet (RuNet) and related online communities.

Past Projects

Technology for Transparency Network

The Technology for Transparency Network was a participatory research and mapping project to gain a better understanding of the current state of online technology projects that increase transparency, government accountability, and civic engagement in Latin America, Sub-Saharan Africa, Southeast Asia, South Asia, China, and Central & Eastern Europe. The project is co-funded by Open Society Institute's Information Program and Omidyar Network's Media, Markets & Transparency initiative, and aims to inform both programs' future investments toward transparency, accountability, and civic engagement technology projects.

Voices without Votes

During the United States presidential election of 2008 Global Voices was commissioned by Reuters to create a website, Voices without Votes, to tracked global online conversation about US politics and foreign policy. Amira al Hussaini was editor of the website, and Global Voices authors and editors all contributed in the 8 months leading up to Barack Obama's inauguration in January 2009.

The Witness Hub

From 2006-2007, Global Voices and human rights video organization WITNESS collaborated on a pilot project to monitor human rights citizen videos from around the world.[7] The effort was led by Sameer Padania, and won Best New Media Project at the One World Media Awards in 2007.[8] WITNESS developed The Hub as central part of their own website in 2008, launching a community forum where people can upload human rights videos themselves. The Hub was itself archived in 2010,[9] and in collaboration with YouTube and social media curation site Storyful, Witness launched a YouTube Human Rights Channel in May 2012.[10]

References

  1. Boyd, Clark (6 April 2005). "Global voices speak through blogs". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 2 January 2012.
  2. Sweney, Mark (13 April 2006). "Reuters partners in comment blog". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2 January 2012.
  3. "J-Lab". J-Lab: The Institute for Interactive Journalism. Retrieved 2016-06-28.
  4. "Previous Anvil of Freedom Winners". Estlow International Center for Journalism & New Media. Retrieved 2016-06-28.
  5. "What is Global Voices" Global Voices. Accessed 1 August 2012.
  6. Salzberg, Chris (July 2008). "Translation and Participatory Media: Experiences from Global Voices". Translation Journal. 12 (3). Retrieved 2 January 2012.
  7. "Global Voices/Witness Hub archive page" Global Voices
  8. "List of 2007 One World Media Award Winners" One World Media.
  9. 18 August 2010, "Update on The Hub and Witness' New Online Strategy" Yvette Alberdingk Thijm
  10. 24 May 2012, "Witness and Storyful Announce New YouTube Channel For Human Rights" Sam Gregory

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/21/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.