Post on 06-May-2015
description
DPI-665Politics of the Internet
Feb 22, 2012
“Organizational Change:
From Fortresses to Sponges”
Micah L. Sifry
Audio: http://bit.ly/x3HWaV
CC-BY-NC-SA
Topics for discussion
• What are the characteristics of the “fortress” model of organization?
• Business, non-profit, campaign: does the “fortress” apply across all three?
• Surfrider Foundation, Twestival, charity:water, Genocide Intervention Network -- What do these have in common?
Fortress mentality
• Imposing over others• Inside is everything• Outside is dangerous• Knowledge is
compartmentalized• The king rules• We each have our place• We’re at war
Sponge mentality
• Hyperlinked• Decentralized• Flowing• Open access• Rich data• Broken at the edges• Borderless
Genocide Intervention Network
• Starting as a student network• Initial mission: raise $ for peacekeepers in
Darfur, to help fight genocide• “If the genocidaires in my country were able
to kill 1 million people in 100 days in 1994," she said, "why can't we students raise $1 million in 100 days?"
“When we first started organizing on Facebook in 2005, we found many existing groups on campuses working to end the genocide in Darfur. So our role wasn't to try to convince people to become active, but to give them effective tools, like our congressional scorecard and 1-800-GENOCIDE hotline, to take action on a regular basis.”
--Ivan Boothe
User empowerment
Our mission: to empower our members to prevent and stop genocide, and in so doing, to create an educated anti-genocide constituency. While we do, of course, want to increase our membership rolls and make ever-larger donations to civilian protection, in some respects it's not always necessary for people to perform every anti-genocide action through our organization. If our videos or emails or profiles get people talking more substantially about genocide — and the concrete ways in which they can actually prevent and stop genocide — then in some sense whether they end up on our mailing list is somewhat beside the point. Through their knowledge they will engage others, and ultimately enhance the anti-genocide movement we're helping to build.” --Ivan Boothe
What’s coming next
• Organizing without organizations
• Emergence
• Hyperpolitics