My first introduction presentation on journalism and social media in the South Caucasus for journalists from Azerbaijan and Georgia at GIPA in Tbilisi.
5. GLOBAL VOICES
Global Voices is a community of more than 300
bloggers and translators around the world who work
together to bring readers repor ts from blogs and
citizen media everywhere, with an emphasis on voices
that are not ordinarily heard in the mainstream media.
Global Voices is translated into more than 30 languages
by volunteer translators, who have formed the Lingua
project. Additionally, Global Voices has an Advocacy
and Rising Voices sites.
6. GLOBAL VOICES IMPACT
Four websites most consistently account for links
between countries: YouTube, Wikipedia, the BBC and, a
distant four th, Global Voices Online. The last of these,
launched at Harvard University in 2005 […] works to
create links between bloggers in different countries,
and to find what it calls “bridge bloggers” […]
THE ECONOMIST, 2 SEPTEMBER 2010
9. THE MEDIA
DATA:
CAUCASUS RESEARCH
RESOURCE CENTERS
(CRRC)
How wellTV journalists inform the population (%) CB 2012
Armenia
Azerbaijan
Georgia 12%
7%
8%
4%
8%
11%
8%
9%
19%
49%
28%
42%
21%
33%
16%
6%
14%
4%
Very well Quite well In the middle Quite poorly Very poorly Don't know
13. SOUTH CAUCASUS
ARMENIA
• February 2008 Presidential Election
• 10 dead, State of Emergency declared
• Politically polarised blogosphere, donor focus on alternative media
GEORGIA
• Foreign radio stations deprived of licenses in January 2009
• Increase in number of blogs
• ‘Donkey Bloggers’
GEORGIA
• August 2008 war with Russia
• Activity mostly on forums, but more blogs appearing
14. NAGORNO KARABAKH
• 25,000 DEAD UNTIL 1994 CEASEFIRE
• 1 MILLION REFUGEES AND IDPS DISPLACED
FROM THEIR HOMES
• 16 PERCENT OF AZERBAIJAN CONTROLLED
BY ARMENIAN FORCES
• BORDER SKIRMISHES AND CLASHES,
INCREASE IN SNIPER INCIDENTS
• NEW GENERATIONS OF ARMENIANS AND
AZERBAIJANIS LIVING WITHOUT CONTACT
WITH THE OTHER
• CONFLICT USED AS A POLITICAL TOOL IN
ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN
• PEACE STILL ELUSIVE
15. NAGORNO KARABAKH
[…] people are often inclined to consider their existing
attitudes and beliefs to be true and filter the news through this
lens.Thus, they accept messages in order to maintain their original
perceptions. […] bias in the local media [...] serves as a means to
fuel and perpetuate hatred.This is a role the media has and
continues to play with regards to the conflict over Nagorno
Karabakh.
ARMENIAN AND AZERBAIJANI INTERNATIONAL NEWS COVERAGE, CAUCASUS
RESEARCH RESOURCE CENTERS (CRRC)
http://epfound.am/files/mb_fg_report_finalized_edited_12.27.2008.doc
16. NAGORNO KARABAKH
[A] negative context [is set] in the public consciousness,
which hinders dialogue and mutual understanding [...]
Without more accurate and unbiased information [...]
free of negative rhetoric and stereotypes, Armenians and
Azerbaijanis will continue to see themselves as enemies
without any common ground.
ARMENIAN AND AZERBAIJANI INTERNATIONAL NEWS COVERAGE, CAUCASUS RESEARCH
RESOURCE CENTERS (CRRC)
http://epfound.am/files/mb_fg_report_finalized_edited_12.27.2008.doc
20. Anyone who believes that all citizen media are
objective and impar tial is either mad or hasn't actually read
any citizen media. […] What's become very difficult is
using citizen media to understand what's actually
happening on the ground. […] This sor t of situation can get
even more complicated when there aren't impar tial journalists
on the ground.
ETHAN ZUCKERMAN
http://www.eng.kavkaz-uzel.ru/articles/13149/
RUSSIA-GEORGIA WAR
21. ANOTHER ALTERNATIVE?
In the 21st century, media has begun to affect war more
than ever before. Digital media technologies [...] have
increased communication and information dissemination
in conflict settings [...]. These new tools can be used to
foment violence or to foster peace, and it is possible to build
communication systems that encourage dialogue and
nonviolent political solutions.
DIGITAL MEDIA IN CONFLICT PRONE SOCIETIES
http://cima.ned.org/publications/research-reports/digital-media-conflict-prone-societies
28. We hear far too little of what I call this “third narrative”
of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict, a narrative of peace. It
spins the idea that the two people are capable of getting
along fine, have lived together in the past and, if politicians are
able to overcome differences […], can live together in the
future. International mediators are too times to speak this
narrative or feel that is not their business. The media in both
countries suppresses it.
CAUCASUS CONFLICT VOICES, MAY 2011
THOMAS DE WAAL, CARNEGIE ENDOWMENT FOR INTERNATIONAL PEACE
HTTP://PEACE.ONEWORLD.AM/CONFLICT_VOICES_MAY_2011.HTML
ALTERNATIVE NARRATIVES
31. A CYBER UTOPIA?
The reason why the KGB wants you to join Facebook is
because it allows them to learn more about you from afar. It
allows them to identify certain social graphs and social
connections between activists. Many of these relationships
are now self-disclosed by activists by joining various groups.
EVGENY MOROZOV, THE NET DELUSION: DARK SIDE OF INTERNET FREEDOM
http://www.rferl.org/content/interview_morozov_internet_democracy_promotion/ 2284105.html
32. A CYBER UTOPIA?
I study the ways new media shapes people's perceptions
of the world. It's my fond hope that social networks such as
Facebook will help users broaden their perspectives by
listening to a different set of people than they encounter in
their daily life. But I fear services such as Facebook may
be turning us into imaginary cosmopolitans.
CNN, DOES FACEBOOK UNITE OR DIVIDE US?
http://edition.cnn.com/2010/OPINION/08/03/zuckerman.facebook.global/
33.
34. FOREIGN FIGHTERS
The use of social media among young people going to join
rebel groups in Syria and Iraq has exploded. It is their main
source of information and communication.
The consequences for society of so many people being exposed
to the violence and brutality of war and to radical extremist
groups at the forefront of the fighting are unpredictable, but
unlikely to be positive.
RICHARD BARRETT, UNITED NATIONS COUNTERTERRORISM TASKFORCE (CTITF) CO-FOUNDER
http://techpresident.com/news/wegov/25167/while-jihad-waged-iraq-and-syria-counter-narratives-go-online
35. COUNTER NARRATIVES
Attractive alternative narratives can contribute to the
prevention of radicalization and recruitment if they are
delivered to the target audience by trusted sources. […]
community leaders that are informed of potential
radicalisation and recruitment to violent extremism in their
own communities are better par tners in effor ts to counter
violent extremism in those communities.
DEVELOPING EFFECTIVE COUNTER-NARRATIVES IN COUNTERING VIOLENT EXTREMISM
(CVE), HEDAYAH CENTRE. SEPTEMBER 2014
36.
37. COUNTER NARRATIVES
• Positive and Alternative Narratives
• Strategic Counter Narratives
• Ethical Counter Narratives
• Ideological and Religious Counter Narratives
• Tactical Counter Narratives
• Humour and Satire
DEVELOPING EFFECTIVE COUNTER-NARRATIVES IN COUNTERING VIOLENT EXTREMISM
HEDAYAH CENTER, SEPTEMBER 2014
38. CYBER REALISM
[...] the internet is not magic; it is a tool. Anyone
who wants to use it to bring nations closer together has to
show initiative, and be ready to travel physically as well as
vir tually. As with the telegraph before it—also hailed as a tool
of peace — the internet does nothing on its own.
THE ECONOMIST, A CYBER-HOUSE DIVIDED
http://www.economist.com/node/16943885?stor y_id=16943885