[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] report on social engagement, civil society and online media
Mon Feb 03 21:55:27 GMT 2014
The King Baudouin Foundation has just published the report “Social
engagement, civil society and online media”, authored by Nico
Carpentier, with the assistance of Tereza Pavlícková, Giulia Airaghi,
Silvia Bertolotti, Liesbeth Merckx en Itir Akdogan. The report is
available in Dutch and French, and can be dowloaded via the links
mentioned below. In this email (and in both reports), an English summary
has also been included.
Sociaal engagement, maatschappelijk middenveld en online media (in Dutch)
Free to download from:
http://www.kbs-frb.be/publication.aspx?id=309904&langtype=2067
Engagement social, société civile et médias en ligne (in French)
Free to download from:
http://www.kbs-frb.be/publication.aspx?id=309904&langtype=2060
+++
A summarizing reflection on the research project “Social engagement,
civil society and online media”
Online media are often viewed as the solution to all kinds of problems,
yet this says more about our fascination with (media) technology than
about these media’s actual ability to fix those problems effectively and
in an exclusive way. Nonetheless, online media do also have something to
offer, not because they are panaceas, but because – provided they are
used wisely – they can help citizens and civil society organisations
attain their objectives (to greater effect).
The key question in this report is deceptively simple: How are online
media used to underpin social engagement? More specifically, how can
these online media be used to this end in and by civil society? A
question like this comes dangerously close to the category of questions
that are so wide-ranging as to be unanswerable. At the very least,
answering questions of this kind requires an innovative combination of
methods, of which this study thankfully makes use (for more details see
the report itself). However, one important aspect that needs to be
emphasised here is the choice to work with a typology. The development
of any typology has its drawbacks, because a great many details are
invariably lost, but the major strength of applying one is that it
provides an overview of a tremendous diversity, in this instance the
variety of online practices that foster social engagement. Furthermore,
the components (or dimensions) of this typology are not just there to
lend structure to the report, but also constitute an integral part of
the results of the study. In other words, they did not arise
arbitrarily, but were generated through the analysis that preceded the
study.
What the study came up with was a typology comprising two basic
dimensions. The role of online media in and as used by civil society (to
promote social engagement) depends first and foremost on a distinction
between internal, internal-external and external use. The second basic
dimension is the distinction between access, interaction and participation.
1. The internal use of online media in and among civil society is often
overlooked in discussions about social engagement, but in this context
it is extremely important. The argument is this: civil society itself is
an environment of social engagement and the online media that support
the work of organisations active in this domain, in so doing, also
effectively help to foster social engagement. It is here we encounter
the first set of online practices that enable civil society
organisations to support their administration, procurement, filing,
registration, internal communications and internal democratic functioning.
Of course, civil society organisations do not focus exclusively on their
own actions, and their use of online media, as a function of social
engagement, is often designed to attain objectives related to specific
social domains. That said, these civil society organisations’ relations
with the outside world are complicated, so the typology makes use of two
components (internal-external and external) to describe and understand
them. This, too, is a key distinction that was identified in this study,
because two very different kinds of practices are involved here. In some
cases civil society organisations aim to draw citizens who find
themselves outside their scope of activity into the respective
organisation (in many different ways); on other occasions they try to
forge links between themselves and the citizens in question. One example
of this involves the recruitment of volunteers or staff. These kinds of
practices fall into the category internal-external, as do the
possibilities given to citizens to offer financial support or offers of
e-learning by organisations. In other instances, organisations
strengthen citizens’ engagement without directly involving them in their
actual workings. In this context, organisations play a role that entails
giving access to content or technology, stimulating interactions between
various other individuals, groups or organisations, or facilitating
these citizens’ participation in social domains other than the
organisation itself. Practices of this kind fall into the external
category, and examples include organisations that offer free and/or open
software and organisations that offer loans to other organisations via
an online platform or use their own website to collect money for other
organisations.
2. The second basic dimension to emerge from this study is the
distinction between access, interaction and participation. This
distinction, combined with a supporting dimension (differentiation
between organisations, people, content and typology), has already been
used in previous publications (see Carpentier, 2011). This dimension
seems eminently useful in the context of this study for recognising,
categorising and structuring the current range of practices. Access is
all about (offering) availability and presence, e.g. providing access to
information or to people (by making them contactable) or technology
(e.g. by providing computers). Here we see that online media not only
enable information to be put to use in what is often a more efficient
manner (within the organisation), they also make it possible for
organisations to disseminate information about themselves and their
staff, provide access to the documents they have produced, and
(sometimes) place technology at users’ disposal. On the external level
we see that online media can be used to disseminate information about
other organisations and unlock information stemming from them. In some
cases access is provided to technology, for example by organisations in
the free and/or open software movement (F/LOSS) or in the WiFi community
movement. The second element of the second basic dimension is
interaction. Interaction is a concept that denotes what are termed
socio-communicative relations, where people communicate with each other
and/or act together (among other things within communities or
organisations), where people interact with texts (e.g. interpreting
them), or where people interact with technology. Here again, there are
many different ways of interacting, which immediately means that online
media can be used in many different ways. Internally, many forms of
online cooperation are possible, and online media are also used to study
and teach or learn. At the internal-external and external levels we see
a similar structure (admittedly with a different purpose), with five
forms of interactive use of online media: financing, recruiting,
teaching or learning, networking and mobilising, complemented with the
divulgence of specific information (so-called social curation, whereby
people point to interesting content that they found on other plforms)
and the teaching of skills in the use of online technologies.
At the internal-external level, we see online media used to receive
donations, recruit staff and volunteers, assign tasks, study, create a
community around the organisation, conduct campaigns, allow people to
interact with content they have produced themselves and with technology.
Furthermore, (at the external level) online media are used to make
online donations, to enable cofinancing and joint purchases, stimulate
volunteer work, support the sharing of know-how, form networks, expand
social dialogue, enable campaigns to be run and allow people to interact
with content and technologies.
Finally, there is the third concept of the second basic dimension:
participation. In the study in question, this concept acquires a
specific significance because it refers to joint decision-making, both
formal and informal. In practice this means that the discussion on
participation ultimately revolves around power and the equality of power
positions. Once again, online media are used here: in the case of
internal and internal-external use they serve for participation in the
organisation, whereby some forms of this participation are more minimal
and others are more maximal. At the internal level online media are used
to foster internal (organisational) democracy, for example by providing
access to (internal) policy documents, or to facilitate it through forms
of co-decision-making.
At the internal-external level we see that organisations use online
media to gain advice from outside the organisation, launch a dialogue
about their organisation, poll their supporters or, in the more radical
forms, to allow outsiders to take part in decision-making processes.
Participation also plays a role at the external level, but in such
scenarios it is more a question of participation via organisations, with
reference made to the role they play in empowering people in other,
external contexts (i.e. outside the organisation in question). Often,
the focus is on emancipating citizens and giving them greater influence
in the political domain, as for example in the case of a project that
informs citizens about how taxpayers’ money is spent. However, we see
that online media are also used to support their participation in a
cultural and media context and in the domains of knowledge and
technology, amongst other things.
The following table below affords an overview of the typology developed
here [removed]
In addition to highlighting the diversity of online practices, this
study also focussed on their frequency, based on a survey of 902 Belgian
civil society organisations that provided information on how often
organisations use which online media and insights into the practices
used to foster engagement. Here are some of the striking findings about
organisations’ use of online media: roughly 90% of civil society
organisations have their own website; virtually all organisations
(99.4%) use e-mail; 59.2% claim to use social networking sites, 53.1%
text messages and 41.6% an intranet. So we can conclude that
conventional online media are widespread within civil society. Other
technologies are less commonly used, such as online cooperation and
video sharing 25-35%; Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP), photo
sharing, blogging and micro-blogging 15%-25%; mobile apps, RSS feeds, QR
codes and video-conferencing 10-15%; whereas chat rooms, magazine
publishing, social curation, wikis and podcasting all scored less than
10%. The differences between various types of organisations hinge
primarily on where the organisations are active geographically, and on
their sector of activity, with some online media being used more by the
cultural sector.
When we look at the use of online media in terms of practices that
promote engagement, we find high percentages at the internal level for
communication, exchanges of information and networking, but lower
percentages for the internal use of online media for teaching/learning
and research, which are used by somewhere between 50 and 60% of the
surveyed organisations or thereabouts. At the internal-external level we
find the same strong emphasis on communication, the exchange of
information and networking, but also high scores (of roughly 80%) for
the use of online media for persuasive purposes (convincing people). The
figures for the (interactive) use of online media for teaching/learning,
recruiting and financing are lower, especially when we consider the
actual use of various online technologies. In this latter instance the
percentages are below 20%, and most of the more participative forms of
online usage also yielded low percentages. Finally, at the external
level – an aspect covered by relatively few of the questions included in
the survey – we see low percentages of below 15% for the interactive use
of online media for financing, networking and participation. The
exceptions here concern the use of social curation (44%) and helping
other organisations to develop their website (27.5%). When we consider
the differences between the organisations, we see that these differences
are significant mainly with regard to the geographical scope of the
organisations’ activities, the region to which they belong and their
intranet use.
The conclusion underscores the relevance of this study for civil
society. One of the important lessons to be learnt is that the
importance of online media for organisations should not be
overestimated, because it constantly needs to be embedded (and made
meaningful) within the context of the organisations themselves. At the
same time, the importance of online media must not be underestimated,
because they offer a great many possibilities, which are effectively
deployed, as this study shows. This does not mean there are no gaps or
opportunities to do better. If we start off by considering the first
basic dimension (internal/internal-external/external), we see that on
the external side of this dimension there are many opportunities for
improvement. Yet there are also a number of gaps relating to the second
basic dimension. At the interactive level we see that the more
innovative forms of online media use – for financing, recruiting and
teaching purposes – are limited, and the presumption here is that a
number of possibilities are being underexploited. The same observation
applies to the participative dimension, at the internal,
internal-external and external levels. Stopping short of suggesting that
all organisations should start to develop maximalist participative
logics at all levels, it is worth pointing out that here, too, the
available opportunities are being underexploited. This study, with its
many examples, offers many possible sources of inspiration and suggests
that there are many lessons to be learnt from the experiences of other
organisations at home and abroad. Yet it should be borne in mind that
organisations always need to integrate online media into their
activities and objectives and that such media cannot constitute
comprehensive stand-alone solutions.
At the same time, the study also calls for further support with respect
to the promotion of expertise; the facilitation of communicative (and
participative) assessments of civil society organisations; the
organisation of needs studies for individual organisations (together
with the establishment of networks) and per sector (combined with
consultations); better promotion of existing (positive) examples; the
mainstreaming of (consideration of) the use of (online) media within the
King Baudouin Foundation; and more generally speaking the further
reinforcement of a participative culture within civil society.
---------------
ECREA-Mailing list
---------------
This mailing list is a free service from ECREA and Nico Carpentier.
--
To subscribe, post or unsubscribe, please visit
http://www.ecrea.eu/mailinglist
--
ECREA - European Communication Research and Education Association
--
Postal address:
ECREA
Chauss�de Waterloo 1151
1180 Uccle
Belgium
--
Email: (info /at/ ecrea.eu)
URL: http://www.ecrea.eu
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]