Abstract This Uplift Academy workshop is to continue the discussion of topics begun at the Boston Workshop workshop investigating ways of using network technology for uplift. It will look examine ways of understanding and promoting "viral" transmission of patterns of uplift, particularly savings-led Nano Finance. Thomas Dichter, author of Despite Good Intentions: Why Development Assistance to the Third World Has Failed will present some lessons learned about "When Less is More" from his 30 years in the development field. Valdis Krebs, president of Orgnet will be presenting a model of Network Weavers in contrast to traditional models of intermediaries. David Ellerman is author of Helping People Help Themselves, From the World Bank to an Alternative Philosophy of Development Assistance (Evolving Values for a Capitalist World) , advisor and speechwriter to Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz at the World Bank, Grégoire Japiot will be the local coordinator for the workshop. Marcia Odell will present some of her lessons learned in savings-led microfinance groups in Nepal and Africa. We will also be discussing a potential Road Trip to Africa. We seek a balanced representation of participants from US, Europe, and all countries at the workshop. Benefits Learn about ways of using internet radio and Podcasting to reach widely dispersed with audio, ways of supporting a diversity of local languages, and support group-forming networks of uplift on a global basis. The workshop will feature the world premier of the episodes of Better World Radio. Reframe your thinking from a model of scarcity (we have too many problems and not enough money), to one of abundance (how does a network deal with 6 billion people, all of whom can help themselves by helping other?) See principles of Appreciative Inquiry and Positive Psychology in action. This workshop is framed as an appreciative inquiry question, the models it proposes are inspired by principles of Positive Psychology. Explore your better world ideas in the context of abundance. The internet provides us with amazing new powers of connectivity, information storage and transfer that can be used in innovative ways. Bring your thoughts on how to use this abundance in your model of a better world; share and discuss them with others in this unique international setting. If previous workshops serve as a guide, we expect the after-hours conversations to be as stimulating as the workshop times. Discover how to disintermediate the intermediaries. If we compare the current development business to the Encyclopedia Britannica, then the Uplift Academy is akin to the Wikipedia. The Uplift Academy is seeking invent new models of better world activities based on the effects of networks. The tone of the workshop may appear to be somewhat irreverent to those in the development industry who are thriving in their roles as intermediaries. Uncover how to stop doing things that aren’t working. Not everything we are doing today is working. It is possible that doing less can accomplish more. How do we “unlearn” what is not working? Background
Using the Network to Help
People Help Themselves Whether it is buying and selling on eBay, finding things on Google, or communicating instantly around the world with email or Internet-based telephony, global communications networks are rapidly changing the world. Even more remote areas are getting connected to the global communications grid through mobile. For example, the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh is in the process of installing a broadband network to connect 21,000 villages to carry information at 100 million bits per second, about 100 times faster than the average US household high speed internet connection.[1] Relatively low cost cameras, MP3 music players/recorders, and widespread mobile phone service also enhance our ability to communicate globally in text, audio, and video. This rapid (and accelerating) advance in communications “wiring” is happening as the Internet is rapidly growing the content it can transmit over it. Huge communities have formed in very short time. eBay has about 150 million members for buying and selling. Myspace connects about 30 million users, signing up 3.5 million new ones each month. Technorati now lists 31 million blogs - people publishing their own journals. Wikipedia is a free encyclopedia that anyone can edit that contains over 1 million articles, outstripping traditional encyclopedia publications. In China, hundreds of millions of people play the same video game. 60 million Skype users can use their computers to place phone calls to each other for free. There are free web sites to store photographs, videos, access email, or create blogs. A new model of web interaction, sometimes called Web 2.0[2], is characterized by greater individual control and content as well as richer networks of connections. These changes mark a stunning reversal from an era of scarcity in information technology services to an era of abundance. For example, an organization could create a system for 1 million users to have unlimited electronic mail, a blog (journal of activities), photo archives, video archives, wiki workspaces (openly editable storage areas) for the cost of basic internet connections. They could create audio or video “podcasts” – their own personal broadcast system. They could tag their information as they saw fit so that they could find each others’ postings. They could use a free service to translate text from one language to another (not perfectly – yet). They could carry audio or video information from an Internet café or office in town to play or record in remote villages on battery powered gadgets – or even mobile phones. The early days of broadcast networks were characterized by a central broadcasting source and N listeners. The value of the network grew directly with the number of the listeners. The Ethernet and the Internet came along, which introduced a rapidly increasing value with the number of participants, called the Network Effect.[3] This also introduced a notion of “smart edge” network design, putting the intelligence of the network on the edges, relegating the network to simply transmitting bits from one edge of the network to the other. This was an inversion of the “smart center” model of network that the phone company preferred. They wanted the network to intelligently handle the information (at a fee), and use “dumb” peripherals to do so (the standard telephone). The End to End principle[4] was a momentous shift in our network thinking, spurred partly by the vision of David P. Reed, who also extended our network vision to include group forming networks. If each node in the network were actually a group, the value of the network rises exponentially with the number of members of the network:
One of the major constraints limiting the growth and value of Reed Networks is attention. As we have seen with the profusion of profusion of information on the Internet, the constraint is not lack of money, but rather lack of attention. Networked relationships are fundamentally different from the hierarchical relationships that have dominated much of our industrial age thinking. Here is a quote from Siegfred Woldheck, founder of Nabuur :
The key to unlocking the value of the network is to create richer forms of linking and relationship – ways of paying attention. We have an abundance of people who want to help and participate: the scarcity is in our ability to connect them in meaningful ways. How can we use this technology to make the world a better place? The network capabilities emerging globally are happening whether individuals like it or not. The question becomes, what can we do to use them to make the world a better place. This is a tricky question. We have a large sector of the economy already trying to do this. Developed countries have spent or invested $1 trillion in loans or aid in less developed countries over the past 50 years. There are 1.4 million registered non-profit organizations in the United States alone, as well as 275,000 NGOs operating in Brazil. Workshop participant Thomas Dichter, a 35 year veteran of the international development industry, writes:[6] “the development organization is in a constant state of anxiety and ambiguity. For here we are, with no proven product, facing, to say the least, a rather flawed sort of “demand,” committed by the very nature of our mission to seeing fewer rather than more “customers.” Meanwhile, we are seeking greater “market share.” Rather odd.” Workshop participant David Ellerman speaks of autonomy-respecting aid, echoing the smart edges/smart center debate of communications era. Referring to participants as doers and helpers (rather than recipients and donors), he notes: [7]
Networks introduce an entirely different model for connecting people and ideas. For example, a village in Mali writes on the web:
A group in Boston may have dealt with this exact problem in a different context, and have some lessons learned to share with folks in Mali. The Boston group would likely have been supported by a different non-profit than in Mali (or the chain of NGOs supporting Mali). However a direct “end to end” connection would allow the exchange of information between folks in Mali and Boston, sharing lessons learned directly with each other. Workshop participants June Holley and Valdis Krebs call this “network weaving”:[9] What does a vibrant, effective community network look like? Research has been done to discover the qualities of vibrant networks. Sociologists, physicists, mathematicians, and management consultants have all discovered similar answers about effective networks. The amazing discovery is that people in organizations, routers on the internet, cells in a nervous system, molecules in protein interactions, animals in an ecosystem, and pages on the WWW are all organized in efficient network structures that have similar properties… As the weaver connects to many groups, information is soon flowing into the weaver about each group’s skills, goals, successes and failures. An astute weaver can now start to introduce clusters that have common goals/interests or complementary skills/experiences to each other. As clusters connect, their spokes to the hub can weaken, freeing up the weaver to attach to new groups. Communications between the branches of a hierarchy (or multiple hierarchies) is difficult. A network approach, however, allows much greater connectivity and relationship. If a network’s growth is limited by attention, then a model in which people pay attention to each other creates a supply for attention at the same time demand for attention increases. This opens up the possibility of a viral model – a network in which nodes create other nodes spontaneously. [10] “We use the term viral architecture to mean a system that is adopted “virally” as that term has come to be used in the marketing industry. Viral adoption refers to a system architecture that can be adopted incrementally, and gains momentum as it scales. The growth behavior of such a system can be called viral growth.” Workshop participant Marcia Odell developed the WORTH program in Nepal, teaching women literacy and savings-led microfinance. In this model, women save their own money, increasing their self-control and eliminating debt-based obligations to others. She also noted that the idea was viral. After a presentation in Kenya, someone had taken her ideas and implemented them on his own.[11] “In Migori, Kenya, while Erica and I enjoyed a cup of tea following a WORTH orientation meeting in the community, thirteen groups of women set about developing by-laws for new WORTH groups that they formed on the spot, even though there was no specific program start-up in sight.” Jeffrey Ashe of Oxfam International has implemented similar savings-led microfinance programs and noted that about 25% of the groups of Saving for Change groups “spontaneously” create additional groups, confirming again a viral spread of the idea.[12] “Oxfam America is working with local partners in Cambodia, Mali, and Senegal to develop a community finance approach that trains poor people to save what they can and distribute it within their villages—for an investment of about $20 per savings group member. Oxfam and its partners use this methodology to combat poverty on a large scale with low costs, local control, and an easy-to-replicate format, said Jeffrey Ashe, the manager of the Community Finance program. "What you want to do is drop that pebble in the water and see the ripples spread," he said.” We can think of savings-led microfinance as a pattern of uplift, which seems to be working as a simple but viral model. Is there some way that we can use the network capabilities that we have today to spread this pattern more broadly and more quickly? What can we learn from the viral spread of the idea to improve it and use it for other patterns of uplift? What can we learn from connecting local clusters of people around the world, sharing their ideas and patterns? What value can we create by helping folks pay attention to each other? We will be addressing these questions at the workshop. With the appropriate answers, perhaps we can move from a model of scarcity: “we have too many problems and too little money” – to one of abundance: “How do we 6 billion people to help each other help themselves?”
[1]
http://purplemotes.net/2006/03/19/innovative-broadband-project-in-india/
-Tom Munnecke, Uplift
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spécialisée dans le management par les connaissances (KM) et la collaboration
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