LOCAL CHOICES - GLOBAL VOICES (LCGV '98) A PROPOSAL FOR A WORLD SYMPOSIUM ON ELECTRONIC COMMUNITY NETWORKING: EXPRESSING CIVIC ENGAGEMENT AND COMMUNITY ONLINE VANCOUVER, AUGUST, 1998 CO-HOSTED BY: TELECOMMUNITIES CANADA AND CANADA'S COALITION FOR PUBLIC INFORMATION DRAFT 3.1, AUGUST 7, 1997 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1.0 Introduction and Objectives 2.0 Setting 3.0 Partnerships 3.1 The partners 3.1.1 Telecommunities Canada 3.1.2 Canada's Coalition for Public Information 3.1.3 International Development Research Centre 3.1.4 Information Technology Association of Canada 3.1.5 Interdepartmental Universal Access Committee 3.1.6 USA Community Networking Partners 3.1.7 International Association of Community Networks 3.2 Management Structure 4.0 LCGV '98 - The Event 4.1 Making it happen 4.1.1 Virtual Symposium 4.1.2 Agenda 4.2 Entertainment 5.0 Recruitment and Marketing 5.1 Canadian Marketing Strategy 5.1.1 Communities 5.1.2 Businesses 5.1.3 Governments 5.2 Other National Community Nets' Marketing Strategies 5.3 International Agencies' Marketing Strategies 6.0 Logistics 7.0 Preliminary Budget 7.1 Risk and Revenue Sharing 7.2 Revenue potential 8.0 Conclusion =================================================== LCGV '98 - WORLD SYMPOSIUM PROPOSAL "I see this project as an excellent opportunity to form a partnership between governments, the private sector and non- profit organizations like Telecommunities Canada and the Coalition for Public information, to showcase Canada's successes and expertise in this area. I believe that the major benefit from direct private sector participation could be the dialogue between businesses and community networking advocates that could then occur." The Honourable Jon Gerrard Former Secretary of State for Science, Research and Development 1.0 INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES The public sector is shrinking and the private sector is globalizing. The social sector is striving to maintain a coherent centre of civilized life. As part of their activities in that centering role, social sector organizations are using technology to create electronic public spaces, and to open those spaces to the participation of all. LCGV '98 will provide the opportunity to consolidate the metaphor of electronic public space by linking on a global scale all those communities -- real and virtual -- that have found conviviality and neighbourliness through connecting their cyberspace homesteads. The essence of community development is simple. People want to talk. Let them. But computer mediated networks support new ways of talking that transcend community boundaries set by the limits of time and transportation. In effect, we create our networks and our networks create us. This alters utterly the characteristics that define who is a neighbour and what is a community. This gives each of us greater freedom, but also greater responsibility, to shape the social contexts that we inhabit. While we cannot fully anticipate the society that results from this new freedom, there are engaged people consciously applying groupwares for social purposes. In the process, they learn how the concept of community changes as locality diverges. This Symposium will, in fact, create an opportunity for linkages that will bridge real and virtual communities. That those online communities based on interest -- often called virtual communities and often existing only online -- share many values, principles and methods with those communities based on geography reinforces the possibility that the distributed nature of the Internet may be the technical analogue for a broader historical trend. Community precedes commerce. This principle is fundametal to understanding how the benefits of electronic commerce can be fully realized. The introduction of commerce into electronic public space need not undermine community. But if we don't consider the relationship of the two ideas, then we don't have the whole picture. In a networked world, the active totality of people's social, political and economic behaviour, not just their consumer behaviour, is the critical component modifying the open and dynamic systems that businesses and governments seek to understand. The fact that people now connect in continually evolving and shifting electronic social networks creates both new community and new interesting commercial opportunity. But it is always the community that remains the network, not the technological products and services. The same principles and values that reinforce community in general can also reinforce specific communities of commercial opportunity. But we're just learning how to do this. We need to think about and talk about how this might occur. We have to invest money and time in exploring the full range of people's interactive behaviours in online environments. In the open systems of the Net, we have to get involved to ensure that commerce online reinforces community online. Community and commerce can and should compliment each other to the degree that neither exists without the other. The intention of LCGV '98 is to provide community networks and their partners the opportunity to advance the agenda for the global future of the community networking movement. Socio-economic decisions about electronic public space, community-based computer networking and the restructuring of public life should be centered in communities and the individuals who comprise them. The achievement of cohesive electronic domains for support, friendship and neighbourliness is a legitimate goal. Effective public policies and business strategies for transition should be grounded in community needs. The Symposium is an attempt to provide answers to the crucial question of how we fully engage the thinking of all stakeholders about what is clearly a radical social transformation. LCGV '98, as a forum for sharing the lessons that communities and their partners are learning, has five overall objectives: * To provide a global overview of grassroots, bottom-up, community-based experience with computer-mediated communications; * To enable community action by demonstrating the pragmatics of applications for social sector groups; * To act as a catalyst for accelerating international cooperation on the community-centered approach to communications development; * To negotiate new partnerships among community networks at the global level, and; * To foster new community networking partnerships with businesses and governments at local, national and global levels. 2.0 SETTING Canada is one of the world's leaders in the development of Internet applications, tools, resources and services by and for the social sector -- and in the creation of the organizational structures necessary to sustain them. Canada has also led in attempts to ensure that the technology is available to all who can use it, both locally and globally. Therefore Canada should be willing to demonstrate that leadership by hosting LOCAL CHOICES - GLOBAL VOICES (LCGV '98), a global symposium on electronic community networking and on computer-mediated communications for the social sector and its supporters. The host city [under negotiation] is Vancouver, British Columbia. It has excellent international air connections, and a World class multimedia arts community. The BC Provincial Government is implementing the "BC Accord," an imaginative multi-sectoral and community-based approach to Information Highway development. The BC Association of Community Networks is a pioneer of regional approaches to community networking. It demonstrates a model of support that compliments Telecommunities Canada's long term objectives. 3.0 PARTNERSHIPS 3.1 Partners Ultimately, the success of LCGV '98 as a global venture will depend on negotiating partnerships with several other national community networking movements and the international agencies that are becoming aware of them. The core of the Canadian LCGV '98 team can expand as support is negotiated but currently is comprised of four organizations: Telecommunities Canada Canada's Coalition for Public Information International Development Research Centre Information Technology Association of Canada Outward from this core, it is essential to collaborate with other national, international, private sector and government partners. The full partners picture to date is detailed below. 3.1.1 Telecommunities Canada TC is an association of associations that either operate or intend to operate community networks. It was created by community networks to give themselves a capacity to articulate community networking interests in Canada on their behalf. TC's formal organizational structure is fairly embryonic, consisting of seven elected volunteer board members. Although an informal structure and interim board came together at the second annual conference of community networks, Ottawa, August 1994, it wasn't until the third annual conference in Victoria, August 1995, that the board was first formally elected. The board is exploring national community networking activities, methods and priorities within the limits of extremely small resources. The board members are scattered across Canada, and all of them are more highly active in local community networking organizations than they are in national activities. Most of the board's collaborative work is accomplished via email. Through its President, TC participates in the International Association of Community Networks project. TC Board members also participate in the Community Access Project Advisory Board (an Industry Canada project to connect 1,000 rural communities to the Internet), the National Steering Group on Electronic Public Space, and the Coalition for Public Information. 3.1.2 Canada's Coalition for Public Information CPI is a national public interest group concerned with public awareness of communications and information infrastructure change. It has an office, staff, and sufficient funding for long term planning. At a strategy meeting in Toronto, Saturday, April 27, 1996, CPI adopted a vision of Canada as a knowledge society. It also adopted related objectives that place community and community networking at centre stage. Through its Chair, CPI was represented on the Information Highway Advisory Council (Canada's equivalent of the US NII Advisory Council), and is represented on the CANARIE Board (a government / business partnership to develop bandwidth capacity at the backbone level of Canada's communications architecture), and the Community Access Project Advisory Board. 3.1.3 International Development Research Centre IDRC is a Canadian aid agency with a mandate to fund developing-world researchers, thus enabling the people of the South to find their own solutions to their own problems. Its information science programs have a special interest in global knowledge sharing networks and in maintaining community based approaches to the use of information technology and telecommunications. It has funded the implementation phases of LCGV '98's Web site. 3.1.4 nformation Technology Association of Canada ITAC is the premier voice of the Canadian information technology industry. Its mission is to provide leadership on issues affecting the growth and profitability of the industry in all regions of Canada, and to promote the effective use of information technology by Canadians. While the full extend of its participation is under discussion, ITAC is fully active in the development of the LCGV '98 proposal and business plan. 3.1.5 Interdepartmental Universal Access Committee Several representatives of this federal government committee for the development of a national strategy for universal access to the information highway have agreed to act as a reference group for contributing a government perspective to the development and support negotiation of the LCGV '98 proposal and business plan. 3.1.6 USA Community Networking Partners Steve Cisler, Senior Scientist, Apple Computer Library, Cupertino, California, is actively coordinating an informal US reference group. This group will become the basis for negotiating formal partnerships in United States once Canadian support is clarified. 3.1.7 International Association of Community Networks The organizers intend that the Symposium be designed in part to serve the long term development needs of the emerging International Association of Community Networks. 3.2 Management Structure This is the first time that anyone has taken an international perspective on expressing civic engagement and community in the transition to knowledge based societies and economies. This means that, as much as possible, we should allow the "how to" to evolve as we go along. Then the issues, concerns and opportunities that surface will drive the structure we create, and not the reverse. In this manner, the process of planning the "event" can have as much or more impact on its objectives as does the culminating 4 days of face-to-face Symposium. The management of LCGV '98 will be overseen by a Board of Directors of the core and major support partners. The Board will be advised by an International Concepts and Connections Committee (C3) including: - a representative from the web site crew - all members of a team that synthesizes Canadian experience and negotiates community nets participation in the event - representatives of other national teams - representatives of supporting partners and international agencies - key representatives of communities of interest and research communities on the psychology, sociology, and political economy of the Net (ie of the key content themes organized through the Web site. 4.0 LCGV '98 - THE EVENT The Symposium will seek to focus the collective wisdom of a broad range of participants into a glimpse of the future, not only of community networking but of communities themselves. On the basis of these insights, action plans will be formulated to ensure that community needs are addressed in the development of electronic highways at national and international levels. The final step will be to discuss with the public and private sectors the necessity of following the lead of the social sector in the development of electronic public space. The objectives cannot be achieved without the concerted effort of community networkers and the cooperation of the other sectors. Coordination will only be achieved through a clear vision of the common ground and interests we all share. Consequently the bridging of gaps will be a main task of the Symposium. The first gap to be bridged is the more apparent than real gap between virtual communities and geophysical communities. Sessions will be devoted to drawing out the underlying commonality of interests, values and principles uniting these two types of community. Sessions will be devoted to analyzing the similarities and differences between identifying with a community of interest, manifest solely in electronic space, and identifying with a geographical community in the midst of which one physically lives. Another kind of gap will be addressed by the attempt to convey a fresh perspective to social, government and business sector representatives, at a global level, about the needs of communities in transition and how making those needs paramount in policy and business decisions concerning computer-mediated communications can have beneficial results. 4.1 Making it happen Because everyone who becomes involved in the process will be an active participant or supporter of community networking movements, what we are really planning is an extended dialogue about change in community life and the effect of community nets on its outcomes. In effect, the event as dialogue is already under way. We must work through national community networking movements. We must ensure that the marketing strategies and the development of program intertwine. The Web site will be built around the key themes. As people are drawn into the discussion of themes, the content of themes and their relationship to each other will evolve and key actors will emerge. Ultimately the program of the actual event will grow out of this interaction. 4.1.1 Virtual Symposium The Symposium needs its Web Site to: a. Organize, synthesize and showcase Canadian community-based experience with computer-mediated communications. b. Organize and publicize the event in an open and visible fashion. We practice what we preach. People need to be able to easily self-identify their interest and opportunities for participation, (ie the site itself is a consciously designed space where a virtual community of interest can emerge). c. Initiate global discussion of the issues surrounding the interaction of community, virtual community and community networking - in order to allow the agenda of the face-to-face Symposium to focus on essential actions and multi-leveled partnership negotiations. d. Act as a catalyst and link for national sites that support community networks, especially for the emergence of new ones. In effect, the objective is to design the "world" site to assist the proliferation of new national sites and organizations that support community networking. e. Create an explicit space to discuss actual/potential linkages with developing countries f. Create space for remote interaction and participation in the Symposium itself (virtual attendance). g. Disseminate, publicize and continue dialogue on the Symposium's results. h. Long-term, to support global capacity to develop community networks. After supporting the operation of the Symposium as a one-time event, the Site should be handed off to an appropriate agency with a mandate to support community networking development at the international level. The Concept Map (see 4.1.2), used for organizing the content of the Symposium, is also being used as the basis for site design. Phases in Site Development: 1. Implementation phase: design and establish the site, and plan for subsequent phases (funded by IDRC). 2. Site operation and development up to the time of the symposium, including: - modification, maintenance, and additional design - coordination of moderator roles in discussion spaces and their integration into the actual symposium agenda 3. Operation during the Symposium, the phase which is most labour intensive. This is: a. the virtual conference site b. the symposium's primary global reporting and dissemination capacity 4. Post Symposium. The site migrates to a long term home. Is this in Canada (TC?) or international (IACN?). It should be Canada/TC, but the politics of this question could be significant to the Symposium's impact. 4.1.2 Agenda The following checklist of themes illustrates a possible content framework for purposes of discussion. It is not intended to be inclusive. Ideas for additions, modifications to fit the needs of particular participants, or other alternative frameworks are welcome. PRIMARY THEME: EXPRESSING CIVIC ENGAGEMENT AND COMMUNITY ONLINE SUBTHEMES: 1. SHARING COMMUNITY NETWORKING EXPERIENCE, (HORIZONTAL INTEGRATION OF INSTITUTIONS ACROSS COMMUNITIES): 1.1. Best and Worst Case Examples in Community Net Operations 1.2. National Community Network Development Programs -Top Down or Bottom Up? 1.3. International Action in Support of Community Networking 1.4. Technologies (Hardware / Software / Groupware) 1.5. Linking National Support Sites 1.6. Is there Common Ground Among Businesses Identifying Community as Market? 2. SHARING EXPERIENCE OF COMMUNITY-BASED NETWORK ACTION IN COMMUNITIES OF INTEREST (VERTICAL INTEGRATIONS WITHIN SERVICE INSTITUTIONS THAT TRANSCEND COMMUNITIES OF PLACE) 2.1. Best and Worst Case Examples by Sector 2.2. Defending the Stovepipe - Winners and Losers in Horizontal and Vertical integration 2.3. Special Needs for Access 2.4. Informed and uninformed - achieving equity in universal access 3. INDIVIDUAL EXPERIENCE OF THE TRANSITION TO VIRTUAL COMMUNITY 3.1. Motivation to Connect - Public / Private 3.2. Enhanced effectiveness in Civic Engagement and Wealth Generation 3.3. Belonging / "Membership" - Inclusion and Exclusion 3.4. Autonomy, Anonymity, Identity, Self Reliance and Self Organization 3.5. Bounded Spatial Relationships - Where Does Place (Ecology) Fit In ? 3.6. Hypertext Links as Handshake 3.7. Computer "literacy" as the Expression of self in new media 4. SOCIAL SIGNIFICANCE OF THE TRANSITION TO VIRTUAL COMMUNITY 4.1. Virtual Social Network Theory - Do New Networks Make New Types of People or More of the Same? 4.2. Local Experience as Shared Knowledge Base - Is this the True "Content," not Culture as Commodity? 4.3. Communications Theory - Electronic Public Space (Media) Design Principles and Computers as Theatre 4.4. Culture, Acculturation, and Community 4.5. Multiculture / Language, including Canadian Bilingual Experience 5. THE ROLE OF COMMUNITY IN A POLITICAL ECONOMY OF KNOWLEDGE 5.1. Electronic Democracy and the Disappearance of Authority 5.2. Public Policy - Can we balance Electronic Public Spaces and Private Information Highways? 5.3. Information Economics and its Impact on Community 5.4. Electronic Community and Electronic Commerce - Conflict or Compliment? 5.5. Nation State or Networked Nation? - Contrasting policy and technical approaches to introducing the Internet in a Country. 4.2 Entertainment Hosting the Symposium in Vancouver allows for the involvement of the BC online Arts and multimedia community in a parallel process that explores new modes of expressing individual and communal identity. 5.0 RECRUITMENT AND MARKETING (This section requires discussion and expansion) 5.1 Canadian Marketing Strategy 5.1.1 Communities Particularly through the Web site dialogue, contact will be made with potential participants in non-government agencies, community groups, public interest groups and others involved in the development of community networking, civic engagement social capital. TC and CPI will utilize their memberships in public interest policy alliances on information highway, electronic public space, universal access and telecommunications deregulation. TC will campaign at TC '97 in Halifax and CPI will campaign at Digital Knowledge ll 5.1.2 Businesses This section needs more work, and is the special province of our ITAC partners. The key question is "How does a business make money out of this?" Contact will be made with businesses and industries involved with the Internet and the social sector, particularly those that are identifying community as the focus of their own marketing strategies. 5.1.3 Governments Government agencies like Industry Canada, Canadian Heritage, Human Resources Development, Foreign Affairs and CIDA, and their equivalents in other countries; 5.2 Other National Community Nets' Marketing Strategies Representatives of successful community network movements around the world will be invited to share their experience at a global level, both in the planning and in the event 5.3 International Agencies' Marketing Strategies International agencies such as UNDP, the World Bank and the large philanthropic foundations will be invited to identify and support particular themes that are of interest to them, or specifically to fund the support of developing country participants 6.0 VENUE AND LOGISTICS (details to be supplied) The symposium event will be scaled to accommodate approximately 550 to 700 participants The administrative and logistical infrastructure of LCGV '98 will need to be supplied by an appropriate professional conference support group. 7.0 PRELIMINARY BUDGET Much of the cost of this event goes into talking about it before the fact. TC and CPI, as volunteer organizations, lack the staff and resources to cultivate and sustain the level of advance dialogue and synthesis that is necessary to give real depth to the final result. Finding substantial support for the development costs, well in advance, is the key financial factor in Canada's hosting of this event. Development and organizing expenses (Sept 1/97 to Aug 31/98) Organizing staff 130,000 Community nets team 80,000 Office expenses / travel 55,000 Reporting, media, advert 22,000 Web site 65,000 ========================= $352,000 Event expenses Meeting rooms 30,000 Conf. Meals x2 31,000 Keynote speakers 3@5000 15,000 Travel sub - key actors x24 53,000 Onsite logistics/support 35,000 Materials 15,000 Entertainment 25,000 ========================== $204,000 sub total $ 556,000 contingence@10% $ 55,600 ========================================== TOTAL Estimate $ 611,600 7.1 Risk and Revenue Sharing As NGOs, TC and CPI have very limited financial resources and cannot allow LCGV '98 to sustain a loss. It must be entirely self financing. We recommend that any revenues go to the ongoing operation of the web site, where ever it is located, as a concrete contribution to ongoing experience sharing and international cooperation. 7.2 Revenue potential Registration - Community Nets 300@$300 90,000 - Internat. sponsored/govt/corp 200@$750 150,000 BC sponsorships 20,000 IDRC - web site start up 25,000 Development costs, Canadian Gov't consortium 5 depts@50,000 250,000 Student empl grants 24,000 Corporate / Foundation 41,000 Other sponsors 15,000 ======================================== TOTAL Revenue $ 615,000 8.0 CONCLUSION The idea of community is high on any list of values and goals that we might set for the uses of technology. In transition to a knowledge society, the idea of community is, however, just as subject to change as any other basic principle of social organization. Many people now consciously explore the nature of that change. There are many people who find social relations mediated by new communications technologies to be intensely personal and affirming. The purpose of LCGV '98 is to share the experiences of people who express civic engagement and community online. Around the world, social sector organizations face increasing pressure to accept broadly redefined responsibilities for ensuring the survival and renewal of caring, civilized communities. In coping with this enormous challenge, these organizations have begun to exploit the resources of electronic computer-based networking. In developed countries, they are accomplishing this evolution at essentially the same rate as other sectors. Community networks are becoming significant new social learning zones. But electronic networking is a two-edged sword. It is both a means of responding to these pressures, and a primary cause of those very changes in community that demand response. As social networks and communities virtualize their activities by translating them into the online environment, what mirrors can social sector organizations use to see the changes in community and in themselves? How can communities share the pragmatic lessons they are learning about successful response to transition through local self-reliance? As businesses globalize their production and sales by divesting themselves of the unprofitable, what makes them sensitive to the particulars of communities as micro- markets? The skill to express yourself online requires something beyond the phrase "computer literacy." Whatever the phrase is, the early adopters of electronic networking for social action purposes have clearly learned about and taught new modes of inventing groupwares for community development. In effect, some consumers of new media products and services are acquiring a new set of life skills for communicating in a knowledge based society and economy. Community online is great place to look for educated flexible people who can think independently and who are prepared for continuous learning, the very people that businesses foresee as essential to the workplace of the future. As governments face the open, diverse and distributed social systems of global networks, what legitimizes authority to govern? What works in balancing global, transnational, national, and local interests, and who decides? As governments go online and integrate just-in-time approaches to services delivery to the community level, the equivalent of micro-markets in business, what guarantees universal access to the electronic public spaces this creates? It is already obvious that the modalities of world government, or transnational corporate alliances that maximize access to markets, or the hardening of traditional roles for nation states, are not adequate responses to these questions. Governments are about to feel increasing demands from citizens for the protection and promotion of their online homes and communities. One clear government role is to facilitate communities' ability to talk among themselves. In the period leading up to August 1998, the idea and the reality of electronic public space will make itself felt. Electronic public spaces are involving ever greater numbers of citizens. They benefit from and adopt the values that flourish in those spaces. When this process operates at its best, they personally experience a means of transition to a knowledge-based economy centered on social values of equity, inclusiveness, democracy and civic engagement. The purpose of the Symposium, as it is of community networks themselves, is to further those ideals. LCGV '98 will position Canada as an exporter of community networking expertise and technologies -- the grassroots, bottom-up, "people first" expertise and applications that make local infrastructures pivotal in adapting countries to global socio-economic and political change. Effective community-based actions in other countries create long-term windows of opportunity for a multitude of other Canadian interventions. The Symposium is thus part of a conscious long-term strategy to intensify reciprocal "interdependencies" via the global network. LCGV '98 will be the opportunity for amplifying the global voices of social sector organizations online. It will bring those voices to the attention of governments around the world. By hosting this Symposium, Canadians will show their leadership in enunciating those voices. By sponsoring this Symposium, the Canadian government will prove its leadership in attending to the message of the electronic community network movement, and in highlighting significant Canadian expertise in its expression. =========== END ============