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  • Where Hostile Governments Meet Public Media

    Center for Social Media,
    American University School of Communication

    News from the Future of Public Media
    Where Hostile Governments Meet Public Media

    Micael Bogar, 14 November 2008

    How can public media develop in regions where governments are hostile
    to press freedoms? A look at emerging projects in the South Caucasus?a
    region of independent former Soviet countries linked both
    geographically and historically?offers some clues.

    We have created a list of five notable public media projects:
    Institute for Reporter?s Freedom and Safety, Caucasus Center of
    Peacemaking Initiatives, Internews, the South Caucasus blogosphere and
    lastly everyone?s favorite Facebook.

    Not quite initiated into the EU like the Baltic states, but not as far
    east as Borat?s Kazakhstan, the South Caucasus countries stand at the
    crossroads of capitalist western ideals and the good old Soviet days.
    Couched in between Russia, Turkey, Iran and two seas, this region has
    a long history of being the underdog. It is quite a feat that the
    three countries?Azerbaijan, Georgia and Armenia?have survived this
    long at all. It says much about the strength of keeping culture alive.
    Since the dissolution of the Soviet Union, three violent conflicts
    have emerged over the regions of Nagorno Karabakh, Abkhazia and South
    Ossetia.

    In a region where authoritarian governments run commercial media, the
    presence of public media looks at first glance simply nonexistent. But
    it?s in circumstances like these that independent and citizen-driven
    media for public knowledge and action are the most important. Here,
    the stakes are life and death and the need for public action to
    counter government or private interests is more urgent than ever.

    It is important to make a distinction between projects that are
    motivated both economically and structurally from outside and more
    local work that begins within the Caucasus. This is not to say that
    media projects that are funded and created outside of the region are
    not worthwhile, but that much of the time, as top-down projects, they
    do not meet our idea of public media.

    Who then, are the public media makers in the South Caucasus? Here are
    a few game changers:

    1. Institute for Reporter?s Freedom and Safety based in Azerbaijan

    Established just a few years ago, IRFS is a case where citizen
    journalists were moved to form a public around the issues they were
    jointly facing, and the money followed. Their work makes other public
    media projects possible.

    IRFS reports on the corrupt Azerbaijani government?s actions against
    citizen journalists. This allows journalists to continue to work and
    persevere under nearly impossible circumstances. While citizen
    journalists cannot be certain of their safety in Azerbaijan, they can
    be sure that if they are arrested, beaten or threatened, IRFS will
    spread the word far and wide. IRFS?s daily email blasts are always on
    time and chock full of poignant evidence of the Azerbaijani
    government?s attempt to silence the public.

    2. Caucasus Center of Peacemaking Initiatives based in Armenia

    Giorgi Vanyan and Luiza Poghosyan also share a similar story with IRFS
    in that they began their work because they noticed that with a rise in
    nationalist pride has come a similar rise in intolerance for other
    cultures and groups of people. The trend they noticed in all three
    countries was a similar misunderstanding of people living in the other
    two nations. With the current image of the "other" as the "enemy" the
    only reasonable outcome would be war. They wanted to do something
    about this.

    Caucasus Center of Peacemaking Initiatives unites like minded
    individuals from all the regions: within Azerbaijan, Armenia and
    Georgia and the disputed territories of Nagorno Karabakh, South
    Ossetia and Abkhazia. They attract a public of readers who are
    interested in reassessing commonly held images and definitions of
    other cultures within the South Caucasus with their fascinating
    articles challenging cultural norms held for generations in the
    region. Their most noteworthy projects include: Days of Azerbaijan in
    Armenia and facilitation of the Ya Chelovek Traveling Film Festival.

    3. Internews

    Internews has been around the "bloc" ever since the dissolution of the
    Soviet Union. What distinguishes Internews from other nonprofit media
    makers in the South Caucasus is its ability to work so well across
    state lines. In a region where competition between cultures and
    debates about unsettled borders are common everyday conversation,
    Internews? offices in Azerbaijan, Georgia and Armenia have managed to
    rise above the fray. They continue to maintain strong long-lasting
    friendships and work to create poignant yet realistic public media
    projects that governments will not shut down but that will still be
    worthwhile. Their Kid?s Crossroads program airs on local television
    stations around the Caucasus and not only teaches students important
    broadcasting skills but works to provide children with real-life
    stories about people with a neighboring nationality. While Internews
    offices in the South Caucasus are local, they are largely funded by
    the Internews agency in Washington DC. Like many public media makers,
    they face challenges in constantly walking a thin line between local
    government, donor agencies, and, most importantly, the community.

    4. Blogs

    Bloggers in the South Caucasus are multiplying overnight. As Internet
    access becomes more common and the first post-Soviet generation grow
    older, blogs in this region flourish. Bloggers such as Onnik Krikorian
    from Armenia, Anna Dolidze from Georgia and Emin Huseynzade from
    Azerbaijan all blog in English, and provide inspiration to many South
    Caucasian citizens searching for alternative sources of media.

    Evgeny Morozov, a journalist from the former Soviet Union, wrote an
    article titled Citizen War Reporter: The Caucasus Test back in August
    that addressed issues citizen journalists within this region face.

    "It would be sublimely naive?and condescending ?to expect South
    Ossetians or Georgians to respond to intense shellfire by taking a
    crash-course in podcasting, even if they did have electricity and an
    internet connection. Tskhinvali and Gori were never going to be hubs
    of user-generated content from a war-zone."

    However, once again, the question must be asked: How is blogging
    public media? Yes, citizens can log on and blog on to their hearts
    content, but what will that matter if nothing comes of it? With
    blogging becoming such a popular tool for self-expression, it will be
    interesting to see if the ripe moment emerges when Georgians,
    Azerbaijanis and Armenians really do have a reason to unite together.
    It is my guess the blogosphere will be the place in which it happens.

    Until then, with so much dissent within the region, the blogosphere
    seems to reaffirm and entrench the warlike images that other public
    media campaigns work so hard to challenge.

    5. Facebook Activist Groups

    In October Facebook has had its busiest month yet. It?s growing by
    leaps and bounds on an international level. One of its most popular
    features is the Cause groups which allow Facebook members to create a
    page on the site centered around a specific cause or issue. Since the
    invasion of Russia into Georgia, Georgian Facebook Cause groups have
    exploded on to the scene. Facebook pages such as "Stop Fighting in
    Georgia" with 9,000 members and "STOP the Russian Aggression against
    Georgia" with over 23,000 members, offer tools for connection and
    action. Someone even posted a link where can write letters to Putin
    and Medvedev in English.

    A quick search for Nagorno Karabakh Cause groups uncovers a South
    Caucasian mini- information war right on Facebook with hundreds of
    members taking sides. The Azerbaijanis and Armenians are at war over a
    territory called Nagorno Karabakh which both claim to have historical
    and legal claim to.

    One of the cause groups titled Peaceful Solution in Nagorno Karabakh
    seemed to be a place where some true discussion and communication
    across thick state borders could take place, but I found very little
    participation from Azerbaijan?s side at all. The few Azerbaijani?s
    that are members of this cause group are living outside Azerbaijan. No
    wonder: For an Azerbaijani to claim allegiance with an Armenian, even
    on Facebook, could have serious implications if the government-
    controlled press decided it was news worthy.

    Facebook does serve as a forum for conversations to take place in
    public among people who would not typically interact due to the wars,
    but due to social rules set in place by the strict regimes and
    militaristic communities, it hasn?t really in the end served much of a
    public media purpose.

    Now more than ever, opportunities for dialogue and public
    participation are springing up through media outlets. With more
    powerful technologies come stronger connections. As Internet becomes
    more affordable and available, will digital media play a peacemaking
    or inflammatory role across lines that are seldom crossed? What will
    be the turning point? And most importantly, what are the areas of
    interest that will bring Georgians, Azerbaijanis, Armenians, Abkhaz,
    South Ossetians and all the other ethnicities within this geographic
    region together to take advantage of this growing phenomena? The
    answers remain to be seen.

    ---
    http://www.centerforsocialmedia.org/blo gs/future_of_public_media/where_hostile_government s_meet_public_media/
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