Posts tagged as:

activism

Are you a photographer, or just interested in photography? Are you an activist, or someone who likes to be aware of global situations that are often ignored by mainstream media? If so, I recommend you visit Socialdocumentary.net, a website featuring documentary photography from around the world. The site showcases beautiful, engaging, shocking and sometimes heartbreaking images exploring global human condition.
Nearly anyone is able to submit photos – professional and amateur photographers, journalists, NGOs and anyone with a story to tell are encouraged to showcase their photographs and share them with the world.
According to the site, the goal of this website is “to make our lives richer and more informed about issues affecting us and our world today. Powerful photographs can also lead to meaningful change in the lives of ordinary people. SocialDocumentary.net provides tools for photographer to inform viewers how to take action—either by supporting NGOs doing work on the issues, or by engaging in direct political action.”
I encourage you to take a look at this touching and educational website and if you can, submit. I hope it motivates us all to take a closer look at our surroundings, our communities and our world, and share what we find with others in order to educate, and inspire each other to make our world a better place to live.

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What Is Digital Activism?

by Jess Colon-Polk on June 10, 2009

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The hard working folks at DigiActive have created this helpful presentation on digital activism. The short presentation touches on:

- The definition of digital activism
- Some examples of digital activism in various countries using different digital tools.
- The qualities of good digital activism
- Challenges to digital activism

And like all true digital activists, DigiActive has posted this presentation for us all to share and use. Created under a Creative Commons Attribution License, users are encouraged to download, use and remix (with that new Open Source Cinema tool I mentioned)!
View, download and share here.

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I just came across Open Source Cinema while reading an article about filmmaker and vlogger,  Brett Gaylor.

A project of EyeSteelFilm and supported by The Bell Fund and the Canadian Film Center, this collaborative website and application was designed to help filmmakers and audiences create together.  To facilitate simple and powerful user and audience collaboration, the site provides:

  • Remixes, or re editing projects that users can reuse and remake their own unique versions of scenes produced through continual revision and collaboration.
  • A recycling tool that lets users and filmmakers share media and “create the building blocks for collaborative films.”
  • A blog for project admins to post updates on their projects, drive project members to calls to action, and keep collaborators up to date.
  • A listing of projects/collaborative films that are seeking user help.

Besides providing a free and cool resource for people interested in filmmaking, Open Source Cinema provides a forum for activists to utilize social media to create, display work , find the help and support they need from peers and spread the word about their cause.

To check out Open Source Cinema, visit www.opensourcecinema.org.

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nugget I have always been an advocate for vegetarian diets, cutting out red meat or even replacing meat with tofu, vegetables or beans a few times a week. But what I haven’t always been a fan of is one of the biggest voices for vegetarianism and veganism – PETA.

The aggressive, bloody and gruesome pamphlets handed out by equally as pushy PETA reps made my skin crawl. I didn’t want the information, or their views shoved down my throat. I had been fed a certain way since I was born, not by choice, but out of the fact that it was on my table at home.

I vividly remember a pamphlet handed to me during a concert in high school. Abused animals, blood, maggots. It was TOO MUCH. I hated them for making me feel that way. I loved animals and had already been experimenting with vegetarianism. But after being so aggressively approached, my aversion wasn’t towards meat. It was towards PETA. I talked with many people, who had the same reaction. The blood, the gore, the ideas being shoved down throats. It was too much to handle. Especially at age 16.

But I grew older, and so did PETA. I don’t recall when my first encounter with a “friendlier” PETA was, but I do remember actually stopping, reading and listening to the PETA activists at the mall. They still had some pretty bloody and hard to swallow brochures. But they had a new message. They urged people to try cutting out meat from their diets once or twice a week. Their extreme views had moved a little more toward the middle. And it was a whole lot easier for me to swallow. Today PETA still has extreme and passionate views, but they have held on to the middle of the road appeal as well. And I actually follow them quite often online.

My point is, that PETA has found an effective way to appeal to the masses by not watering down their passion, but by making it more accessible, offering more realistic options and asking for support, instead of demanding it. I understood how they were helping animals, urging the human race to be healthier and aiding the environment. Check out the current PETA campaigns here.
Now, this approach worked for me in this situation, I am unsure it would in others.

So, when does a middle of the road agenda work best – and when must we stick to our guns? When do we truly show our anger, excitement or disgust with what is going on with the world? When do we become a Martin Luther King, Jr. or a Malcolm X? I am unsure.
Thoughts?

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