Tuesday 12 July 2011

Association for Progressive Communications - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The Association for Progressive Communications (APC) is an international network of organizations that was founded in 1990 to provide communication infrastructure, including Internet-based applications, to groups and individuals who work for peace, human rights, protection of the environment, and sustainability. Pioneering the use of ICTs for civil society, especially in developing countries, APC were often the first providers of Internet in their member countries.

APC is a worldwide network of social activists who use the internet to make the world a better place. APC is both a network and an organisation. APC members are groups working in their own countries to advance the same mission as APC. APC has more than 50 members from five continents, 80% are based in developing countries. This is a challenge and a strength, because members are at the two extremes of internet development (members in South Korea with incredible connectivity and members in rural Nigeria where they have to power computers using car batteries and solar power) and in between.

APC's vision is "All people have easy and affordable access to a free and open internet to improve their lives and create a more just world."[1]

[edit] Co-founders

APC was founded in 1990 by:

[edit] APC milestones

[edit] 1982

  • A “documentation for action” movement emerges as NGO International Documentation Centre (IDOC) brings together organisations and activists from four continents – including future APC members – who use information for social change.

[edit] 1984

  • The activists working with IDOC create Interdoc, a network of like-minded organisations working with information and alternative media. At this point they communicated mainly using fax and regular mail. People physically travelled around transporting and sharing databases of information and software on disks.

[edit] 1985

  • PeaceNet, a network of peace activists, was established in the United States as a project of the Foundation for the Arts of Peace, through the cooperation of four organisations: Community Data Processing, Center for Innovative Diplomacy, Ark Foundation, and Foundation for the Arts of Peace.
  • GreenNet was founded in the United Kingdom to develop electronic networking for environmental and civil society organisations.

[edit] 1986

  • EcoNet, a U.S.-based environmental network created by the Farallones Institute, was acquired by PeaceNet. EcoNet/PeaceNet later became the Institute for Global Communications (IGC).
  • The idea of linking progressive networks for e-mail and information sharing was formulated by Mark Graham and Mitra Ardron, founding members of PeaceNet/IGC and GreenNet. Working with emerging national networks, rather than expanding into other countries, was defined as a guiding principle from the outset.
  • Interdoc members begin to communicate electronically with one another, including internationally, using Poptel/GeoNet, a progressive but commercial bulletin board and email network.

[edit] 1987

  • IGC in the U.S. and GreenNet in the UK created a transatlantic computer link-up, to connect their separate e-mail and computer conferencing networks.
  • Web Network's earliest incarnation started up in Canada. Called NIRV Center, it was conceived at the 1986 "Fate of the Earth Conference" by a group of Toronto environmentalists, and was Canada's first non-profit computer network serving non-profit and social change organisations;
  • The name Association for Progressive Communications (APC) was invented in the New York hotel room of rock star Peter Gabriel, by Mark Graham, Mitra Ardron, Steven Van Zandt, media activists: Danny Schechter; and Hart Perry.
  • The basis for an APC constitution was outlined at a meeting in IGC's office in San Francisco.
  • WorkNet (which later became SANGONeT) was founded as an e-mail network and bulletin board for the labour movement in South Africa. International connectivity was initially secured through GeoNet in London and soon after through GreenNet.

[edit] 1988

  • Mitra Ardron defines the central characteristic of the “typical APC network user” as “a commitment to a future for the planet that works a lot better than the present.” Mitra leaves GreenNet in Viv Kendon's hands to spend a year developing the APC.

[edit] 1989

  • As the first part of APC's still existing exchange program, Mitra Ardron spends three months at WEB networks in Canada, helping them become the third partner in the APC.
  • Later in the year Jeremy Mortimer from GreenNet helped PeaceNet Sweden; Scott Weikart & Joanne Scott from IGC helped Nicarao in Nicaragua and Steve Frame helped Alternex (the communications branch of IBASE, the Portuguese acronym of the Brazilian Institute for Social and Economic Analysis) and Mike Jensen from WEB to Pegasus Australia. Taking the APC from two to seven members in one year.
  • Collaboration between APC and the United Nations began, in preparation for the UN Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED), more popularly known as the Earth Summit. As APC had the only international, civil society communications network in existence at that time, the UNCED secretariat published their information in APC conferences. They had no other way of distributing information so economically and so effectively. (The UN itself began distributing information by electronic means many years later).
  • IGC, GreenNet, WEB, Pegasus & Alternex met at an Interdoc meeting organised by Michael Pollman from Antenna in the Netherlands in 1989 which was also attended by other future members including WorkNet from South Africa.

[edit] 1990

[edit] 1991

  • Southern and Northern NGOs meeting in Nairobi identified e-mail and the APC conferences as a tool for distance-lobbying the Earth Summit. Chasque, a network created by the Third World Institute (ITeM) in Uruguay, and IGC set up the first e-mail and conference system running from the UN itself in New York, during a preparatory meeting for the Earth Summit.
  • A Fidonet gateway was set up by roving technician, Mike Jensen, at WorkNet/SANGONeT in South Africa, providing Internet mail connections to Zimbabwe, Malawi, Zambia, Botswana.
  • Email links are set up between Cuba and APC networks. They call the Cuban servers three times a day to deliver and collect email.
  • The first meeting of APC partners in southern Africa was hosted by WorkNet/SANGONeT in Johannesburg, supported through a project with Web Networks and Alternatives (then CIDMAA) in Canada.
  • Chasque in Uruguay, GlasNet in Russia and ComLink in Germany joined the APC.

[edit] 1992

  • APC provided the first online communications centre for NGOs and UN delegates at a UN conference — the Rio Earth Summit. Info posted onto APC conferences is accessed around the world and picked up and reprinted in NGO newsletters and magazines worldwide.
  • An attempted Russian coup is reported on APC networks via the GlasNet node.
  • APC node ZTN connects more than 1,700 peace, human rights and humanitarian workers and journalists from all countries in the Balkans war through 150+ e-conferences.
  • In September, over 17,000 users in 94 countries were using APC networks.
  • INTERCOM in Ecuador became the eleventh APC member.
  • IGC hosted the first APC Council meeting in San Francisco.

[edit] 1993

  • APC facilitated electronic communications for the UN Commission on Sustainable Development.
  • ComLink/CL-Net provided connectivity at the 1993 UN World Conference on Human Rights in Vienna.
  • The APC Women's Networking Support Programme (APC WNSP) was established and began preparations for the UN Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing (1995).
  • The World Bank cancels plans to fund the controversial Namada Dam in India after activists organise throughout India and beyond using APC conferences.
  • GreenNet and Dutch group, Antenna, encouraged by Jagdish Parikh, established 'Asialink', a project providing start-up funding and technical support to small hosts in Asia working with social movements in their countries.
  • The Green Spider telecommunications network started up to link environmental civil society organisations in Hungary.
  • SANGONeT is the first African organisation to join APC.

[edit] 1994

  • APC and Uruguayan member Instituto del Tercer Mundo (ITeM) provided communications services at the UN International Conference on Population and Development in Cairo.
  • Over 50 email hosts in Africa, Asia, Central and Eastern Europe, and the Caribbean are providing civil society organisations with email and e-information using the Fidonet gateways in London, Toronto and San Francisco.
  • An APC cost-sharing project was launched, with the objective of reducing the expense to people in Africa and Asia of receiving and sending e-mail.
  • Several APC members attend the Internet Society's workshop for developing countries held in Prague. APC member staff acted as trainers and APC partner in the Czech Republic, Econnect provided logistical support for the workshop.
  • Web Networks hosted an APC Council meeting just outside Toronto.
  • The StrawberryNet Network was established in Romania, with the assistance of Green Spider.

[edit] 1995

  • APC received consultative (Category 1) status to the UN, in June.
  • NordNet from Sweden lead a group of local Danish communications activists in setting up electronic communications at the UN World Summit on Social Development (WSSD) in Copenhagen. For the first time web browsers were available and the public were able to access an APC WSSD site.
  • A 40-woman team of APC communications experts provided connectivity and training to NGO participants at the Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing, and — as part of Media Caucus — ensured that the issue of women and ICTs was placed on the UN Agenda.
  • APC technicians and training activists provided skills training at an informatics symposium hosted by Economic Commission for Africa in Ethiopia.
  • Alternex/IBASE hosted an APC Council Meeting in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

[edit] 1996

  • SANGONeT hosted an APC-Africa-Women's technical training in Johannesburg for women system operators. Now that Internet access was becoming more widely available in some parts of the continent, Fidonet systems operators were given skills to make the transition to Internet.
  • The first APC European Meeting was held in Slovenia. Other regional APC meetings were held in preparation for the 1997 APC Council meeting.

[edit] 1997

  • APC partnered with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and other international organisations to organise the Global Knowledge conference in Toronto. Web Networks, APC's Canadian member, brought together the hundreds of NGOs using ICTs for international development participating physically and virtually using a Website and e-mail.
  • Web Networks and APC publishes the influential Working Together Online, which documents the lessons and techniques gained through APC experience in online networking.
  • An APC Africa Strategy Development Meeting was held in Johannesburg with more than 35 participants from APC member and partner networks from all over Africa. A powerful statement from the meeting — the "Holy Family Communiqué" — outlined the position of development-oriented networks and information providers towards trends in private sector and donor investment in networking in Africa.
  • The APC mission was formalised at APC Council's meeting in South Africa, hosted at Itala by SANGONeT.

[edit] 1998

[edit] 1999

  • The first "World APC Techie Conference" brought together technical directors from all over the APC community in Prague.
  • An APC - Central Europe meeting was held in Kwacany, Slovakia.

[edit] 2000

  • APC facilitated and provided consultation and research services for the "Access" track of the Action Summit at the second Global Knowledge conference in Kuala Lumpur. The Action Summit created a plan of action for the Global Knowledge partner organisations, which included various government-related development agencies, companies, and NGOs involved in the development and ICT field.
  • The APC WNSP co-coordinated a women's network (WomenAction 2000) to bring an NGO perspective to the UN Beijing +5 review. They survey 1,000 respondents online to produce a strongly worded NGO declaration. Official declarations promote ICT as a way of enhancing NGO participation in global policy making.
  • The first ever APC Betinho Communications Prize to recognise the socially meaningful use of ICTs was awarded to the Max Foundation, a life-saving online support network for the families of children suffering from leukaemia in Latin America, and host of the region's first online bone marrow tissue registry.
  • The APC Action Areas for 2000-2001 emerged at the APC Council meeting in Visegrád, Hungary, hosted by Green Spider, for the first time identifying ICT policy advocacy as a core priority.
  • BlueLink from Bulgaria and Strawberry Net from Romania joined the APC.

[edit] 2001

  • New vision statement drafted at an APC council meeting held in Piriapolis, Uruguay hosted by the Third World Institute (ITeM): "APC works to achieve a world in which all people have easy, equal and affordable access to the creative potential of the internet to improve their lives and create more democratic and egalitarian societies.”[2]
  • APC organises “internet rights” meetings in Asia, Europe and Latin America. Internet Rights and Policy Monitors are set up and a Rapid Response Network to mirror threatened sites is formalised.
  • APC and partners launched ItrainOnline a portal which collects training materials on ICT for social change.
  • Women's programme begins testing and refining the first draft of the Gender Evaluation Methodology (GEM) for ICT initiatives in 25 projects in various developing countries

[edit] 2002

  • The first APC Internet Rights Charter is published in three languages.
  • The GenARDIS project is launched to provide small grants to improve agricultural initiatives by women through the better use of ICTs, eventually disbursing over €300,000 in direct seed grants over eight years.
  • First APC Africa Hafkin prize named after connectivity pioneer Nancy Hafkin is won by the Fantsuam Foundation, a small microcredit scheme which goes on to be a key reference in Nigeria.
  • APC runs first ICT policy training workshops in Africa and India in the run-up to WSIS.

[edit] 2003

[edit] 2004

[edit] 2005

[edit] 2006

  • APC is nominated by peers to address post-WSIS deadlock and proposes the multi-stakeholder format of the IGF.[5]
  • First ever Take Back The Tech! campaign.
  • The second edition of the APC Internet Rights Charter is published and translated into more than twenty languages.
  • APC and UNDP convene a workshop in 2006 on “open access”.[6]

[edit] 2007

[edit] 2008

  • Survey identifies APC as the most relevant actor in Latin American ICT processes after the UN Economic Commission for Latin America (ECLAC).[7]
  • First Feminist Tech Exchange trains over 100 women's rights activists.
  • First regional Internet Governance Forums co-organised in East Africa in Nairobi, Kenya and Montevideo, Uruguay in the build-up to the third IGF in Hyderabad.
  • APC has trained people from 680 organisations in technology for social change and ICT policy from 2004-2008. [8]

[edit] 2009

[edit] 2010

  • APC awards USD 240,000 in small grants to over 60 projects working to end violence against women using technology.[11]
  • GenARDIS has disbursed 310 000 euros in direct seed grants to 34 grassroots organisations since 2002.[12]
  • Prof. Peter Willetts argues that if not for the APC decisions of the 1980s, the internet would not be the public and open platform it is today.[13]
  • Global Information Society Watch 2010 tackles the pressing issues of ICTs and climate change and e-waste.
  • Sana Masood is runner up in the International Red Cross’ “Young Reporter” competition for a digital story she created about an acid attack survivor at a Feminist Tech Exchange workshop in Pakistan.[14]

[edit] 2011

  • APC launches the Internet Rights are Human Rights campaign including a dedicated edition of GISWatch and a defence of human rights and women's rights workers working online.
  • APC publishes EroTICs, research on the real lived experiences of women around the internet and sexuality.
  • The eleventh face-to-face APC council meeting is held on Panglao Island in the Philippines, hosted by the Foundation for Media Alternatives. Over one hundred communications activists also attend a Networking and Learning Forum to strategise for an open, fair and sustainable internet.

[edit] APC members

[edit] North America

[edit] South America

[edit] Caribbean

[edit] Europe

[edit] North & West Africa

[edit] South & East Africa

[edit] Asia-Pacific

[edit] Gender evaluation methodology (GEM)

The Gender Evaluation Methodology is an evaluation methodology that integrates a gender analysis into evaluations of initiatives that use information and communications technologies (ICTs) for social change. It is an evaluation tool for determining whether ICTs are really improving or worsening women’s lives and gender relations, as well as for promoting positive change at the individual, institutional, community and broader social levels. It was first developed in 2002 and was tried and tested by thirty community-based organisations. Since then hundreds of people have become involved in GEM's development including people who developed the tool, who train in how to use GEM, who are adapting GEM (to increase its applicability to rural ICT4D projects, telecentres, software localisation and ICT policy advocacy and who are now offering GEM evaluations on a consultancy basis. The GEM manual was written in English and has been translated into French, Spanish, Brazilian Portuguese and Arabic.[2] GEM was developed by the APC Women's Networking Support Programme (APC WNSP[3]).

[edit] Global Information Society Watch

Global Information Society Watch is an annual report co-produced by APC and Hivos, a Dutch organization for development, which looks at the progress being made in creating an inclusive information society worldwide (particularly in implementing World Summit on the Information Society goals), encourages critical debate and strengthens networking and advocacy for a just, inclusive information society. The country reports are easy to read and offer a quick insight into a country situation. Contributors are primarily from civil society organisations active in ICT issues in their countries. Themes covered include environment and ICTs, human rights and the internet and internet infrastructure. There is a Giswatch book website.

[edit] APC prizes

Through its Betinho, Hafkin and Chris Nicol prizes, APC recognises and documents outstanding ICT contributions that significantly impact the world's communities. The prizes were last awarded in 2008.

[edit] ActionApps

ActionApps offer a low cost solution for content sharing that both increases the functionality of not-for-profit and NGO websites, and facilitates the creation of portals sites so as to improve the visibility of civil society information. They are driven by free software. ActionApps were first developed by APC and released to the free and open source software community. Development continues strongly in South America.

[edit] Board

APC's executive board members (for the 2008-10) period are: Danilo Lujambio, Argentina (chair); Valentina Pellizzer, Bosnia and Herzegovina (vice chair); Andrew Garton, Australia (secretary); Alan Alegre, Philippines; Anriette Esterhuysen, South Africa (executive director); Michel Lambert, Canada; and James Nguo, Kenya.

[edit] Notes and references

[edit] External links

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