Development action with informed and engaged societies
After nearly 28 years, The Communication Initiative (The CI) Global is entering a new chapter. Following a period of transition, the global website has been transferred to the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits) in South Africa, where it will be administered by the Social and Behaviour Change Communication Division. Wits' commitment to social change and justice makes it a trusted steward for The CI's legacy and future.
 
Co-founder Victoria Martin is pleased to see this work continue under Wits' leadership. Victoria knows that co-founder Warren Feek (1953–2024) would have felt deep pride in The CI Global's Africa-led direction.
 
We honour the team and partners who sustained The CI for decades. Meanwhile, La Iniciativa de Comunicación (CILA) continues independently at cila.comminitcila.com and is linked with The CI Global site.
Time to read
1 minute
Read so far

Winds of Change?

0 comments
Affiliation

New York Times

Date
Summary

"...something is going on in the Middle East today that is very new. Pull up a chair; this is going to be interesting...."

In this New York Times Op-ED column, author Thomas L. Friedman contrasts the Middle East’s political and citizen activism processes in his history of covering the region with Lebanon’s election of June 7 2009 and Iran’s election of June 12 2009. He highlights the diffusion of technology and its role in horizontal communication, political mobilisation, and criticism of government leadership.

Friedman notes that the internet, blogs, YouTube, and text messaging via cellphones, particularly among the young, including the 70 percent of Iranians who are under 30, are tools of choice for activism, enabling them to monitor vote-rigging by posting observers with cellphone cameras, among other communication possibilities.

The author describes two experiences showing the depth of information and communication technology (ICT) diffusion in Middle Eastern culture: first, his meeting with a friend who is an 80-year-old Lebanese historian who is a Facebook user; and, second, his interview with the “March 14” party opposition leader in Beirut, Lebanon, who monitored the elections on a wall-size television screen and 16-flat screens connected to laptops feeding breakdowns of voting from every religious community, village by village, and projecting them onto electronic maps on the screens. He says, claiming that former elections were controlled to the point of predictability, "When I reported from Beirut in the 1970s and 1980s, I covered coups and wars. I never once stayed up late waiting for an election result." He suggests that political space has opened through a series of historical forces that have created the space "for real politics" and that ICT has widened the communication possibilities within it.

Source

Email from Buffy Boke to The Communication Initiative on June 15 2009.