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January 30, 2005

SXSW Interactive Conference is March 11-15

Activist Technology: Political activists are beginning to depend on technology, especially email and web-based tools (weblogs, wikis, forums, etc.), and we're seeing a community of developers who are focused on building social and political technologies that activists can use. This panel is a discussion of available tools vs. activist requirements: what's there, and what's needed.

  • Kathy Mitchell, Consumer Union
  • Dan Robinson - E-Volve
  • Ren Bucholz - EFF
  • Shabbir Safdar - Mindshare Interactive Campaigns
  • Erin Rogers - Union of Concerned Scientists
  • Amalia Anderson - League of Rural Voters

Deliberative Democracy and Interactive Technology: How can technology mediate discussions, and how do we avoid the "echo chamber" - how do we facilitate dialog between people with sometimes radically differing viewpoints? Can technology help overcome the current political polarization in the USA?

  • Jerry Michalski, Sociate
  • Kaliya, Identity Commons, Planetwork, and Integrative Activism
  • Tom Atlee, author of The Tao of Democracy
  • Lars Torres, AmericaSpeaks
  • Nancy White, Full Circle
  • Jed Miller, ACLU

Are Political Parties Obsolete? If, using Internet applications, we can form and sustain coalitions in a more ad hoc, distributed way do we really need political parties? Do parties, with their top-down "command and control" structures and commitment to specific ideologies, constrain democratic process?

  • Dan Robinson, E-Volve
  • Glenn Smith, Drive Democracy
  • Jon Lebkowsky, Polycot
  • Andy Rappaport, August Capital
  • Christian Crumlish, author of The Power of Many

How to think about democracy and technology. Direct or "pure" democracy is often considered unworkable. It doesn't scale well, and it's difficult for the general population to make decisions that require specialized study. Its opponents relate democracy to "mob rule" or "tyranny of the majority." Do pervasive Internet connectivity and technologies for discussion, debate, and advocacy make the concept of pure democracy more viable? Will emerging social technologies facilitate a more democratic system of government? What is the appropriate role of technology in political campaigns, issues advocacy, and the election process?

  • Jon Lebkowsky, Polycot
  • Aldon Hynes - Center for Investigative Online Research
  • Jerry Michalski - Sociate
  • Mitch Ratcliffe - Internet/Media Strategies Inc.
  • Rebecca MacKinnon - Blogger Corps
  • Ethan Zuckerman - Berkman Center for Internet and Society

Via Clippings.reblog


Originally posted by Jon Lebkowsky from Clippings.reblog, remediated by yatta on Jan 30, 2005 at 07:01 PM