media

Media in the context of civic media work refers to all modes of mass communication: print - newspapers and magazines, broadcast - radio and TV, and internet sites - personal and from organizations. Civic Media are those forms of communication that strengthen the social bonds within a community or create a strong sense of civic engagement among its residents.

Our projects

Lost in Boston

LIB_MassArt_1_72dpi.jpg

Lost in Boston is a general-purpose web tool that cities can use to get citizens involved in civic improvement projects.

How might communities use it?
Citizens can submit their ideas for the most poorly marked intersections in Boston. Their submissions can contain photographs, video, and other supporting media. Citizens vote on what intersections are in most need of attention. They contribute suggestions for improving the signage at intersections in the form of drawings, etc. and can vote on those suggestions as well. Sponsors sign on to pay for improving the intersections voted most in need, in exchange for placement on signs and/or on the web, and using sponsor funds, the city, perhaps in partnership with other groups, fabricates the new signs and puts them in place.

At what stage of development is it?
Recently proposed, we are currently in meetings with the Massachusetts College of Art and Design and local government officials. The first sign was recently installed on the grounds of MassArt, at 821 Huntington Ave.

Project team: 
Rick Borovoy

Hero Reports

heroReports.gif

Hero Reports, in the form of a website, is a security campaign that reports civic courage. It asks citizens to report moments when others make a difference. Acknowledge those stand up, not in fear, but in hope.

These can be small acts of kindness. Giving up a seat for a pregnant woman, holding the door for another. Or actions at times of crisis. The hero who picks up a fallen child, the bystander who assists in a car accident.

This is the civic courage that also keeps us safe.

How might communities use it?
Any community can adapt Hero Reports to document positive civic acts in their own back yard.

At what stage of development is it?
Hero Reports' vision is to build a system of hero maps that exist alongside crime counterparts. Inspired by the security campaigns of New York City, we are currently developing a scalable infrastructure for communities for Boston, Detroit, Saint Paul and Philadelphia. Prototyping work can be found at http://creativesynthesis.org/civic/heroreports/.

Project team: 
Alyssa Wright

Old and New Media: Converging During the Pakistan Emergency

This is a research paper that addresses the knowledge gap about new media and democracy in the developing world, examines how digital technologies – such as cellphones and live internet streams – and new media platforms – including blogs, YouTube, Flickr, and Facebook – were used to access information, organize political action, generate hyperlocal news reports, and promote citizen journalism during the "Pakistan Emergency," a period of heightened political instability between March 2007 and February 2008.

Project team: 
Huma Yusuf

Learning through Interactive Journalism

SNN-stage.jpg

New computational tools enable new forms of interactive journalism, making it possible to embed not only images and videos but also simulations, animations, and other interactive content within online newsletters and blogs.

In this project, we are exploring how experiences with interactive journalism can foster new learning opportunities, helping students gain deeper understandings of: (1) practices and challenges of journalism, (2) ideas and strategies of computer science, and (3) issues and values in their communities.

How might communities use it?
School or after school activities teaching young people how to interpret and create interactive journalism.

At what stage of development is it?
Field-tested for over half a year at Fischer middle school in New Jersey. Completing first outreach effort: partnering with researchers from the College of New Jersey (in both journalism and computer-science departments) in a pilot study with middle-school students.

Related Tools & Resources: 
Scratch
Project team: 
John Maloney
Project team: 
Karen Brennan
Project team: 
Mitchel Resnick

Awareness-Mapping

Awareness-Mapping.png

We are exploring how the creation of interactive maps can cultivate awareness about local environments, supporting civic engagement by helping community members communicate new perspectives.

To this end, we are developing a set of technologies and strategies that help people create, share, and discuss "awareness-maps" -- nonliteral, interactive representations of places, people, and experiences that help the creators (and their audiences) express and understand their environments in new and unanticipated ways.

We are considering three categories of environments:
* micro-geographies: hyper-local spaces, like a rooftop, a bedroom, or a street corner
* micro-events: short periods of time, like a carnival, a flash mob, or a forest excursion
* micro-reactions: sets of contextualized emotions, like a joyful occasion, a frustrating meeting, or a playful gathering

How might communities use it?
We are using Scratch (for easy creation of interactive media) on the Nokia N810 Internet tablet (for easy mobile capture of in situ images and audio) as our central tool for creating the maps.

At what stage of development is it?
We will conduct initial workshops with groups in Boston and in Bangalore, India.

Project team: 
Jay Silver
Project team: 
John Maloney
Project team: 
Karen Brennan
Project team: 
Mitchel Resnick

Community Partners & Projects

DOTCOM: Inspire Civic Action through Social Media

c David Metraux.jpg

DOTCOM is a program for media-savvy and civically-engaged youth, designed to offer training and opportunities for young people to create socially conscious media that will impact communities across the U.S. and the Caucasus. The program is sponsored by the U.S. Department of State, and supported

7iberDotCom

Tagged:
5.png

7iberDotCom is an independent media outlet that is youth-orientated and Jordanian-based. Pronounced hiber - with a hard ‘h’ that is virtually non-existent in the English language – 7iber looks to provide an online platform that allows young Jordanians to become more actively engaged. Essentially, it is a place for citizen-generated content to flourish, fostering a critical and informed civil society through an independent and participatory new media. 7iber offers a model for free speech in Jordan by offering an alternative to mainstream and state-run media, while attempting to provide professional, ethical and fearless journalism.

New England Ethnic Newswire (NEWz)

newz.jpg

The New England Ethnic Newswire is a one-stop platform for stories from the 100 ethnic media in the region, together with blogs, photos, audio postcards, resources, and a special health report offering a stream of original medical stories to and from underserved neighborhoods.

Citizen Media Law Project

CMLP Badge RedWhite.png

The Citizen Media Law Project (CMLP) provides legal assistance, education, and resources for individuals and organizations involved in online and citizen media. The CMLP also provides research and advocacy on free speech, newsgathering, intellectual property, and other legal issues related to online speech.

The CMLP is jointly affiliated with Harvard University’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society, a research center founded to explore cyberspace, share in its study, and help pioneer its development, and the Center for Citizen Media, an initiative to enhance and expand grassroots media.

The CMLP seeks to build a community of lawyers, academics, journalists, and others who are interested in facilitating citizen participation in online media and in protecting the legal rights of those engaged in speech on the Internet.

For more information, please visit our website at http://www.citmedialaw.org/.

The Open Media Project

WebDOM.jpg

The Open Media Project is a two-year effort to develop a comprehensive set of open-source tools designed for Public Access TV stations, Community Technology Centers, and other noncommercial community media organizations with an interest in helping under-represented communities use the media to increase the presence of low-income perspectives in the media landscape, and to encourage greater communi

Printcasting

printcasting_logo_large.jpg

Printcasting will make it possible for anyone to create a local printable newspaper, magazine or newsletter that's supported with local ads. No money, tools or design will be required -- only passion!

The Printcasting system turns traditional "terrestrial" publishing roles upside down and inside out so that anyone in the community can participate in one or more of them. We're partnering with the community to help us grow niche audience and revenue organically.

EveryBlock

EveryBlock is a new experiment in journalism, offering a Web "newspaper" for every city block in a number of American cities.

Enter any address, neighborhood or ZIP code in those cities, and the site shows you recent public records, news articles and other Web content that’s geographically relevant to you. To our knowledge, it’s the most granular approach to local news ever attempted.

New School Student Ambassadors

nssa int participatory learning logo.jpg

The Project will provide an international project-based participatory learning experience that:

  • Improves language and media literacy skills
  • Enhances cross-cultural creativity and innovation by developing critical thinking skills
  • Focuses on 21st century collaboration and communication skills
  • Builds story telling, persuasion, and presentation skills for US and Chinese students
  • Project-based educational programs will be delivered to teams that combine Chinese and US students through online, interactive environments making maximum use of social media, social production, collaboration, and communication (text, audio, video) tools. New School Student Ambassadors has fully developed and piloted joint US-Chinese participatory learning, project-based programs using open source course management, electronic portfolios, and activity management systems. Through a network of collaborating professionals and organizations, we support teacher/coaching professional development in both China and the US.

    Campaign for the .nyc TLD

    dotNYC logo 3-11-07.JPG

    As the Internet becomes central to civic, commercial, community, and cultural life, those with the best tools and understanding of its capabilities will prosper. Using research, education, training, and outreach, Connecting.nyc Inc.'s mission is to prepare the city for our networked future. To do so, we will use the .nyc TLD (like .com or .org but just for New York City) to plan, to organize, and to empower New York City's residents, institutions, and businesses to better connect with one another and the world.

    The opportunity to acquire the .nyc TLD will arise in 2009.

    Street Media: Ambient Messages in an Urban Space

    A thesis for Comparative Media Studies at MIT.

    An inventory and analysis of the media lining our urban surfaces that describes how residents, visitors, governments, and businesses great and small use the streetscape to communicate.

    by Rekha Murthy

    Recent blog posts, discussions, and resources