Five women writing about new media, activism and development
Category: <span>Post-colonialism</span>

Category: Post-colonialism

New media and technology: A reflection to blogging as part of ICT4D

New media has been described as anything that is delivered digitally to you such as emails, websites, mobiles and any internet-related form of communication[1]. However looking at this description in relation to activism and development; it is lacking some depth and concept.  Some definitions of new media focus exclusively upon …

On Ketty Nivyabandi and her atypical journey as an “active citizen”

Image above: Ketty Nivyabandi kneels down in exasperation during the 13 May 2015 women-only led protests. Photo by © Joseph Ndayisenga From leader of the first ever women-only street protests in Bujumbura, Burundi to Secretary General of Amnesty International Canada, anglophone branch In my first blog post a few weeks ago, a …

Waking up (in) the development sector – time to centre anti-racist efforts!

It is a long overdue reckoning with race that is currently taking place globally and across (hopefully) all sectors as a direct consequence not only of the #BlackLivesMatter protest but also as a response to locally embedded and deeply engrained oppressive structures.

Check your privilege! Or How digital gaming may offer a path to a more equitable future.

Don’t we all prefer to have choices than to be thrust onto a certain path in life? The gratification one achieves from making that choice may not always be certain beforehand as is the case with most decisions we face, from the most existential of is there a God to …

#Hairitage, #HairActivism, New Media and Self-Development

Let me begin with Blumer’s 1969 (quoted in Crossley 2002:3) definition of what social movements are:  Social movements can be viewed as collective enterprises seeking to establish a new order of life. They have their inception in a condition of unrest, and derive their move power on one hand from …