Blog Development, blogs
Only a few months
ago ODI began asking itself what a blog was. Today, we recognise it is, at least,
a useful communication tool and enjoys significant support. At its best, blogs
can filter information from previously inaccessible sources; can convene different
groups around a single issue providing a menu of opinions and links to further
resources that conventional media finds it difficult to deal with; may offer the
basis of a tightly knitted community of practice or interest group; and constitutes
a cost-effective platform for individuals and organisations to join the global
development debate.
Blogs are also
only one of tens, if not hundreds, of different social technologies that have
become available in the last few years; and whose use has grown exponentially.
Blogs are nicely complemented by a flickr (or a pictures blog www.flickr.com);
and can be linked to private or semi-private networks of friends and colleagues
(friedster or www.dgroups.org, come to
mind). They can, and are often provided, with a wiki platform which allows the
members of a community to build a common stock of knowledge (www.wikicities.com).
Blogs constitute an inexpensive way of publishing material and opinions online.
For more mainstream options, on-demand publishing such as that provided by lulu
(www.lulu.com) are a complimentary alternative.
The value of these
social technologies lies in their capacity to bridge the IT gap between resource
rich CSOs in developed countries and those in developing countries; limited
in their action by a systemic lack of resources. It awards small CSOs in developing
countries access to information and participatory spaces otherwise closed to
them. Some social technology platforms are being designed specifically for CSOs:
see for example, www.civiblogs.org and
www.dgroups.org. Other blogs are specifically
targeting the development sector: http://psdblog.worldbank.org,
http://blogs.cgdev,org/vaccine,
http://blogs.odi.org.uk, and many others.
Blogs can also be used to influence policy directly, bringing together similar
or different opinions and articulating them around a common goal. Political
and policy debate among Peruvian expatriates (http://peruexilio.civiblog.org),
for instance, has found a space in the local debate through a blog developed
on top of one of these platforms. This is a tool the diasporas can use to remit
more than money: ideas.
But what is really
interesting is what blogs and other social technologies will do to development.
Just as it happened with the traditional news-media in recent years, blogs might
be well on track to overthrow the traditional thinking spaces of
the development sector. Let us leap forward and imagine the future:
High profile conferences
and symposia are pre-empted by detailed, dynamic and exiting on-line and public
debates filled with up-to-date information and breakthrough and challenging
premises, assumptions and theories. Ministerial meetings and trade negotiations
see their agendas changed by the sheer volume of evidence and discussion being
exchanged online. Blogs, unlike the traditional means of communications are
all about links to other blogs. These links foster debate and aggregate scattered
knowledge (sometimes through a wiki), making it easier to set agendas without
the tedious and unfairness of long consensus building negotiations in which
one view is imposed (or negotiated) over the others. They are therefore a perfect
tool for the small CSOs who might be cash-short but not motivation-deprived.
If blogs have their
way, development thinking will look very different. Blogs do not require long
reference lists or foot-notes. They do not include literature reviews or conceptual
frameworks. The speed with which ideas can be produced, shared and exchanged
will increase. What will think tanks like ODI look like then? Will we be able
to keep up with change? Are our research and production processes geared towards
blogging? Can our complex narratives of development and change be easily translated
into friendly yet intelligent and undiluted messages? Can we collaborate with
competitors linking our work to theirs and trusting that they will link theirs
to ours?
What will happen
to intellectual property? As the Bob Dylan line goes, anything that cannot
be imitated must die. Blogs are full of imitations, copycats and borrowed
ideas that help strengthen them but rarely rewarding their source. Are the incentives
of the academic and research community the right ones for this possible context?
Can we just let anyone take our words and twist them around in a myriad of possible
ways and contexts?
If blogs will shape
the way in which we think about development, then what is there to stop them
changing the ways development is carried out? Already e-groups help practitioners
keep up with the latest theories and ideas. In turn they provide researchers
with up-to-date information and monitoring of the projects and programmes implemented.
Blogs are defining the prominence of particular interventions, jostling them
to the top of the media agenda in just a few hours of the stories or the pictures
being posted. Professional and personal blogs can be used as monitoring and
evaluation tools that when used systematically can replace tedious, long and
expensive traditional methods.
There is still
much to ask about the ways in which the development sector can use social technologies;
but this must come hand in hand with questions about what their use will do
to the sector itself. How will it change how we think and do; as well as what?
re: Blog Development, blogs @ Friday, January 20, 2006 7:34 PM
Your posting regarding the use of blogs and other social technologies for international development, although rather idealistic in spirit, is also relevant for another important reason. The production of shared knowledge, instant communication between practitioners, eliminates the “expert” syndrome. Why is this relevant? While theories are produced by northern CSOs, everyday practice by southern CSOs provides an equal playing field for knowledge sharing. Everyone has their role in the field of international development; each is interdependent on the other to make the world a more fair and just place. These roles could be fortified with more fluid communication that these blogs and social technologies allow.
Whether these technologies are used as such, may only be determined over time. Without over stressing the common IT barriers like access, language, and accountability, the time spent using these new technologies for any CSO is quite large. Keeping up with the latest blog, understanding how to use the latest IT solution (like setting up RSS) or generating feedback and comments on well thought out materials take time that could be used for face to face interactions with community members—where there is a real quality of life. This time used should not be underestimated.
Nonetheless, the cost-effective platform provides an attractive new source for exchanging information by numerous actors from around the globe. Here are a few interesting uses of blogs:
1. A Social Fundraise and Consultant in Chile set up his own BLOG>>
http://fundraising.blogspirit.com
2. A Moldovan International Development Student set up his own BLOG>>
http://www.culiuc.com/
3. The Social Edge, a progressive foundation in California has various conversation on social issues on their BLOGs>>
http://www.socialedge.org/