Online Volunteer Editors for OneWorld: better late than never?14 December 2003 Through its network of 12 regional centers, OneWorld supports and facilitates an online community of over 1500 global partner organisations working for human rights and sustainable development. Its most visible product is the development portal www.oneworld.net which since 1996 has become a favourite new media site for multi-lingual audiences in over 100 countries seeking news and analysis on issues neglected by mainstream media. Southern volunteers: a new opportunity As the technology revolution gained pace and it became apparent that online volunteering need not be exclusive to relatively affluent countries, OneWorld increasingly recognized the opportunity to redistribute its editorial voice from north to south, a core strategic aim. As part of a collaborative european programme, "Building Digital Opportunities" (BDO), and with specific funding support of UK Department for International Development, OneWorld embarked on a project which aims to demonstrate the potential of new technologies to create opportunities for 50 volunteers resident in the developing world. As well as introducing these "southern voices" into OneWorld editorial output, the project aims to increase the proportion of overall content sourced from southern NGOs. Assignments for Volunteer Editors OneWorld has thrown its earlier caution to the winds. Not only are volunteer editors asked to take responsibility for specific pages within the OneWorld site but two new product ranges have been created for them. OneWorld Country Guides and Topic Guides are gradually making their presence felt in the "In Depth" section at http://www.oneworld.net/article/archive/301. These Guides aim to provide straightforward educational material for their subject from a development perspective, in part through articles written by the editor but more particularly through choice of suitable links to civil society content. Management Structure The majority of the volunteer editors are recruited and managed by regional coordinators in OneWorld's offices in Africa, South Asia, and Latin America, the latter adding valuable spanish language depth. Overall project management is handled in London. The 3 regional staff combine volunteer coordination with editorial responsibilities; their background professional experience inevitably tends to the latter, as mainstream OneWorld editorial standards are an essential quality baseline for the programme. The ICT dimension Volunteer Editors join a dedicated "Dgroup", an online resource tool developed by another component of the BDO programme. This provides access to essential training material such as OneWorld editorial guidelines and FAQ for specific assignments. The formal editorial briefing is presented within standard online templates for country and topic guides. The Dgroup is also the tool for dialogue within the team of editors. Volunteer Editor profile Recruitment through the global NetAid and OneWorld sites has been successful when seeking editors for unspecified subjects but much more difficult when targeting individual countries or topics. Networks accessible through local OneWorld partners are increasingly necessary for recruitment. At the time of writing, 35-40 volunteer editors have accepted the terms and conditions and are at various stages of production of OneWorld Guides. Over 20 Guides have been published, including 6 in spanish. There is no geographical concentration of editors; almost 30 southern countries are represented, from Colombia to Vietnam. Likewise there is no consistent occupational profile; some volunteers are already involved in the NGO sector; some are new graduates, some are involved in journalism, and a small number are in business or the professions. Just under 50% of the volunteers are women. Results The Guides have been well received by the internal OneWorld network which welcomes attention to a content gap and which applauds the visible effort to shift editorial voice from north to south. Closer scrutiny must however acknowledge that quality so far is variable; some Guides are outstanding whilst others lack depth of material, are silent on key issues, and rather static. Any shortcomings are however certainly not insurmountable. Future Plans Subject to ever-present funding constraints, there are two broad directions for strengthening the volunteer editors programme. One is to continue to develop customised software to simplify the task, in particular search tools geared to NGO content for Guide subjects. The other is to strengthen resources dedicated to each Guide, perhaps by establishing a team of volunteers to support the original editor, and/or by encouraging selected OneWorld partners to provide advice and share strategic ownership. Establishing volunteer coordinator structures in regions not currently covered (Middle East, South East Asia, Central Asia) is a priority, if funding can be found. Reverse Colonialism? Whatever the limitations of future plans, the project offers an interesting reversal of traditional "colonial" volunteerism. In contrast to the established routes for volunteers heading south from Europe and North America, here are volunteers from the developing world creating products of reference value to classrooms in California, editors in Edinburgh, and the mushrooming broadband general public. This is one small demonstration of the power of new technologies to level the playing field of human capacity in our information society. Posted: 2010-1-05 Updated: 2010-1-05 | ||