Monday, April 30, 2012

Activism 2.0


Activism 2.0


Due to its highly collaborative nature the Internet has evolved into a medium through which spreading and collaborating on ideas is easier than ever before. With this has come a new form of social activism: virtual activism, or activism 2.0. The term activism 2.0 refers to people using online mediums such as online forums, virtual worlds, and social media platforms to raise awareness of social issues and invoke social change.

History

Though online activism has existed for years, the term “activism 2.0” was coined by Justin Dillon’s 2008 documentary Call + Response. The term highlights the technological aspect of online activism.

Activism 2.0 has been enacted through a variety of platforms including Twitter, blogs, and online petitions. One of the earliest and most notable examples of activism 2.0 was the September 2007 Second Life strike against IBM. Over 1000 people partook in a virtual strike against real life IBM Italy’s deficient employee benefits. One month later the strike succeeded when IBM Italy signed a new contract with its trade union, scoring performance bonuses and a health insurance scheme for its workers.

Benefits

Activism 2.0 makes it easier than ever before for groups to mobilize.

Little to no cost

Activism 2.0 virtually eradicates the costs of awareness literature and minimizing the time required by the masses to participate. While activists used to have to print pamphlets and spend time picketing, modern activists can reproduce flyers as many times as they want with no cost and attract attention by posting their information once in strategic places online.

Potential for fast exponential growth

Using the Internet as its medium, activism 2.0 also allows activists to inform large masses of social issues in extremely small amounts of time. Working without geographical limitations, the number of participants in an activism 2.0 cause can grow exponentially.

Ability to translate into real-world protest

Modern Internet tools make it easy to take what’s said online to the real-life streets. Users can purchase t-shirts to support causes, use information found online to petition their local politicians, use virtual logos to create screen printing campaigns, etc.

Recent Examples

Change.org

Change.org is a website dedicated solely to activism 2.0. Through online petitions hosted on the site users have pressured state and national judicial systems, Bank of America, and Universal Studios among others to create change that benefits society.

One of Change.org’s most famous successes was the release of Chinese political prisoner Ai Weiwei. 80 days after major art institutions such as the Guggenheim, the MoMA, and Tate Modern petitioned the Chinese government for the artist’s release they found success.

When the family of Trayvon Martin found that local and state governments would not listen to their pleas for prosecution they took to Change.org to gain national attention. After receiving over 2.2 million signatures—the highest number of signatures any change.org petition has ever received—to their petition Martin’s family finally achieved the national coverage necessary to force Florida to prosecute George Zimmerman, the killer of their son. The Trayvon martin case is a great example of ways activism 2.0 can lead to real-life protest and change.

Tumblr on SOPA

In an effort to raise awareness of the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and encourage social action against it, the blogging site Tumblr implemented obvious disruptions to its service on November 16 of last year. It blocked out all text on users’ Tumblr homepages (or “dashboards”). Unable to read Tumblr posts users were forced to visit Tumblr’s informational page on the Act. There a link to call your state representative made it effortless to request that the Act not be passed.

Tumblr “censors” its page to demonstrates the potential effects of SOPA

BBM and the London Riots

Last summer teens across London organized protests and riots to avenge the death of London resident Mark Duggan via a unique form of social media. Rather than using open forms such as Twitter and Facebook teens turned to the BlackBerry Messenger service, which allowed them to send locations and times in messages untraceable by local authorities.

Social Media and the Arab Spring

During times of heavy political unrest and deep government censorship in the Middle East last year, social media played an important role in helping protesters organized and keeping the world informed of the conditions of the protests. By posting protest locations and times on Twitter and Facebook some protesters were able to stay up-to-date on the status of the revolution in their country. In time when Arab governments took to restricting media access to their soil, protesters were able to upload video footage of brutal police treatment of protesters. Official news sources were then able to stream this footage online and on TV, raising awareness of the social conditions in the Middle East and pressuring Arab governments to allow democracy to happen.

Criticisms

Activism 2.0 is often referred to as “slactivism,” hinting that online activism makes it easy for people to participate in social action but doesn’t necessary make them social activists working for real change. Krist in Ivie on socialcitizens.org defined activism 2.0 as “fitting into people's everyday routines and finding ways for people to use technology and social media to habitually contribute to social change with small, practical acts - and, often, clicks. The ideal is a place where people integrate activism and supporting their causes into their regular routines – using downtime at the airport to send emails for their cause, donating at the grocery check-out counter, asking friends to charitini for their birthday.” Here she demonstrates that one of activism’s primary goals is to make activism easily accessible. In some cases this also makes online activism easily forgotten.

Conclusion

Though activism’s 2.0’s ability to create real-life social change varies from case to case, its impact on the World Wide Web is undeniable. Activism 2.0 is a manifestation of the inherent social nature of the Internet. When people across the world can interact with just a few taps on their keyboard, social change is bound to happen. As online tools such as video chat, online shared documents and the like continue to streamline online collaboration, activism 2.0 will only expand to allow more people to fight for social change.

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