Global Voices: Budapest, Hungary

The Caucasian Knot will not be updated for the next few days because I will be in Budapest, Hungary, in my capacity as Caucasus Regional Editor for Global Voices Online. The citizen media project founded by Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society will be holding its annual summit in the Hungarian capital.

Global Voices convenes a yearly Summit which brings together the members of the Global Voices project and its wider community with a diverse group of bloggers, technologists, journalists and other interested persons, to share information on developments in citizen media spearheaded by and of direct relevance to people outside North America and Western Europe.

[…]

This year, Global Voices is partnering with Média Hungária, organizers of the annual MediaHungary and InternetHungary conferences, to hold the Summit in Budapest on June 27-28, 2008.

The Global Voices Citizen Media Summit 2008 will explore topics around the theme “Citizen Media and Citizenhood”, and address fundamental issues surrounding the actual and potential role of citizen media producers in the public life of the countries they live in. As the Internet and the increasing accessibility of citizen media tools offer growing numbers of people throughout the world the means to distribute information globally, how does this affect or change the ways in which people participate in public life? Can citizen media make people better citizens? How can citizen media help affect lasting social change?

I’ll specifically be making a presentation in the session The Wired Electorate in Emerging Democracies and past summits have also been available for those not present to look in on via the Internet.

Session 2: “The Wired Electorate in Emerging Democracies”

MODERATOR: Solana Larsen.

SPEAKERS: Daudi Were (Kenya), Onnik Krikorian (Armenia), Hamid Tehrani (Iran), Luis Carlos Díaz (Venezuela)

The rise of blogging, social networking and micro-blogging services like Facebook and Twitter, video- and photo-sharing sites like YouTube and Flickr, and the spread of mobile technology have given ordinary citizens the means, at least potentially, to participate more fully in the democratic process. This session looks at the impact these tools have had on recent elections in Kenya, Venezuela, Armenia and Iran and poses the question: is citizen media having an actual impact on democracies in transition?

For those unable to attend online or off, much of what I will say is already available in posts here and here, and also in last week’s article for Armenia Now.

Incidentally, the official Global Voices Summit site is at: http://summit08.globalvoicesonline.org/.



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    Global Voices Citizen Media Summit 2008 in Budapest

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