[Air-L] ask your lawmaker

tom abeles tabeles at hotmail.com
Mon Jan 12 06:39:01 PST 2009


We are entering an interesting era in the domain of social networking. A report, today, Jan 12, on National Public Radio around community activism and the Obama administration pointed out that they, too are organizing along these lines. What is more interesting is that they have the demographics of the individuals on their lists which lets them selectively activate persons by age, issue, location, etc and immediately not only poll them but move them as a segment into political response. This is what the mailing list kings of earlier years could do to get citizens involved. In other words, the ability to extract maximum attention and pressure.

We are in "interesting times" and the press in an era of the "New Media" is facing an increasing dilema as to its roll in society whether commercial or public broadcast. Is there really a "Fourth Estate" as we have seen in the past or has social media, including blogs and the plethora of networking sites changing the scene and it is not just a matter of adopting new tools but of changing the business model.

The same thing is happening in almost all information gathering/dissemenating organizations, including education at all levels, preK->gray as well as the idea of academic research and publishing.

thoughts?

tom

tom abeles

> Date: Mon, 12 Jan 2009 10:57:31 +0100
> From: murray.turoff at gmail.com
> To: air-l at listserv.aoir.org
> Subject: [Air-L] ask your lawmaker
> 
> Deborah, I applaud what you did and you might be interested there is a
> facebook users group based upon efforts to allow citizens to directly
> vote on budget allocations in local government that is receiving some
> experimental usage in Italy, it is titled something like participatory
> democracy.  It does generate specific dialogues between citizens and
> elected official.  One potential improvement is to have some sort of
> list of very specific topics of concern to the users and to encourage
> group discussions.
> 
> The reverse application of allowing lawmakers to ask questions they
> need answers for is described below.
> 
> Two reports on a system designed to allow state legislative lawmakers
> to ask questions of professionals in many different fields and among
> the state legislature science advisers, usually volunteers retired, or
> representatives of major scientific and engineering societies.
> It worked very well for about three years before they ran out of NSF funds.
> 
> http://library.njit.edu/archives/cccc-materials/
> 
> RR#13  	Guide to the topics system 	Jan. 1981 	Peter Johnson-Lenz,
> Trudy Johnson Lenz
> RR#14 	The evolution of a tailored communications structure : the
> topics system 	Jan. 1981 	Peter Johnson-Lenz, Trudy Johnson Lenz
> 
> There was a system set up in text for what you are doing for the Santa
> Monica city government in California.  The citizens participated but
> many of the elective officials chose to ignore the system.  It is
> referenced in the "network nation" book I believe along with related
> things like "community memory" in Berkely.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> > Message: 1
> > Date: Sun, 11 Jan 2009 15:23:19 -0500
> > From: "Deborah Elizabeth Finn"
> >        <deborah_elizabeth_finn at post.harvard.edu>
> > Subject: [Air-L] Just launched: The "Ask Your Lawmaker" widget
> > To: air-l at listserv.aoir.org
> > Message-ID:
> >        <3228c2a50901111223s4f0951c5wf7a03cc721d6c59d at mail.gmail.com>
> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
> >
> > Dear AIR Colleagues,
> >
> > Before I start bubbling over with enthusiasm, I need to make a full
> > disclosure:  I serve as a paid consultant to Capitol News Connection
> > (CNC).  Urging people to use the Ask Your Lawmaker widget
> > <http://askyourlawmaker.org/widget> is part of what I'm paid to do.
> >
> > That said, I thought that some of you would be interested in tracking
> > or studying this geeky yet populist approach to strengthening
> > participatory democracy.
> >
> > Capitol News Connection is a nonpartisan, nonprofit journalism
> > organization that is based in Washington, DC.  Ask Your Lawmaker (AYL)
> > is one of their online initiatives; constituents from any district in
> > the U.S. can pose questions to their senators and representatives by
> > posting them to the web site, and then anyone who is interested in
> > legislation and policy can go to the site and vote for the questions
> > that he or she deems most crucial.  The CNC reporters are conveniently
> > headquartered on Capitol Hill, and when a question garners enough
> > votes, they go out and ask the legislator(s) to which it is addressed.
> > The responses are recorded in broadcast-quality audio, and posted to
> > the web.  They are also made available to local public radio stations,
> > which are often in need of quotes they can use back in the home
> > district when they report on national issues.
> >
> > Ask Your Lawmaker is now making a laudable move into Web 2.0 territory
> > by offering nonprofit advocacy groups and individual activists a free
> > widget that they can use on their own web sites or Facebook pages.
> > It's a way for advocates to voice their concerns, and to engage their
> > stakeholders in pressing legislators to address an issue,
> >
> > This widget is only the beginning. Capitol News Connection is working
> > on many more ideas for making national news coverage more
> > participatory and holding legislators more accountable to their
> > constituents.  In a time when every community activist can also be a
> > citizen journalist, and RSS feeds are making it easy to syndicate news
> > selectively, Ask Your Lawmaker is poised to become a provider of
> > tailor-made news streams for any advocacy group.
> >
> > Best regards from Deborah
> >
> > P.S.  This post to AIR-L is based on a blog article that I wrote.  You
> > can see the article (and the AYL widget that I created for myself) at
> > <http://blog.deborah.elizabeth.finn.com/blog/_archives/2009/1/8/4050172.html>
> >
> > Deborah Elizabeth Finn
> > Cyber-Yenta
> > Boston, Massachusetts, USA
> > deborah_elizabeth_finn at post.harvard.edu
> > www.cyber-yenta.org
> > Skype:  Deborah909
> > Twitter: Deborah909
> > LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/deborah909
> >
> > "Nothing softeneth the Arrogance of our Nature
> > like a Mixture of some Frailties. It is by them
> > that we are best told, that we must not strike
> > too hard upon others....They pull our Rage by
> > the sleeve and whisper Gentleness to us in our
> > censures."
> > -George Savile (1633 - 1695)
> >
> >
> > ------------------------------
> >
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> >
> > End of Air-L Digest, Vol 54, Issue 12
> > *************************************
> >
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Distinguished Professor Emeritus
> Information Systems, NJIT
> homepage: http://is.njit.edu/turoff
> _______________________________________________
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