HIROSHIMA-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
To improve the ability of citizens’ groups to transmit
information, we will cover media literacy to enable
individuals to recognize the manipulation of information
undertaken by the mass media, and the availability of
public access to enable citizens to broadcast programs
produced by themselves, and the Internet through which
they can transmit the detailed information and discuss
what we can do for our activities in relation with our
information-driven society.
Symposium
Held under the auspices
of Hiroshima NPO Center and JCAFE. |
‘Citizens’
Guide to Transmitting Information Using
Various Media’ |
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| Date |
Saturday 18th October |
| Time |
14:00-18:00 (access from 13:30) |
| Place |
Hiroshima City Plaza for Town Development
through Citizen Exchange
Aeeress: 6-36 Fukuromachi,
Naka-ku, Hiroshima,
730-0036,Japan
TEL: (082)545-3911
http://www.hitomachi.city.hiroshima.jp/m-plaza/ |
| Entrance
fee |
1000 yen |
| Participants |
Maximum of 100 participants. |
| * |
Interpretation will be provided on
the day. |
| Programme |
| Key
speakers |
| |
Lisa
Kimball (The Meta Network,
and Group Jazz)
Rich Cowan (Organizers’
Collaborative) |
| Lecture |
| |
‘Media Literacy’ Yoshimoto
Hideko (Associate Professor
at the Faculty of International
Studies, Yamaguchi Prefectural
University)
‘Utilization of the
Internet’ Hamada
Tadahisa (The Chair of JCAFE)
‘Public Access’ Kawakami
Takashi (Associate Professor
at the Dept. of Language and
Communication, Hiroshima International
University)
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| Speakers’profile |
| Lisa
Kimball
the online community The
Meta Network, and founder of ‘Group
Jazz’
She helped develop The Meta Network, an
online community of change agents which
celebrated its twentieth anniversary in
2003. In 1984, she designed and moderated
the first online symposium on strategies
and techniques for facilitating electronic
groups. She co-founded the Electronic Networking
Association in 1985 and received the ENA
Award for "Outstanding Contribution
to Networking" in 1990. She was a member
of the planning team of the first national
conference on electronic networking in Japan
in 1988, and later led the international
delegation to Japan's first global conference
on networking. Lisa was instrumental in
the development of one of the first civic
networking projects in the U.S., the Public
Electronic Network in Santa Monica. Lisa
Kimball is the founder and Executive Producer
of Group Jazz, an organization that works
as a production company to support the work
of purposeful groups - teams, communities,
task forces, organizations - whether they
meet face-to-face or online or both. Group
Jazz brings together the best tools, technologies,
media, consultants, cast members and practitioners
to create great group experiences that support
action. Lisa is a specialist in applications
of electronic networking and the design
of virtual spaces for organizations, teams,
and online communities. Her clients include
a wide range of corporate, civic, and educational
organizations including Pfizer, IBM, Fannie
Mae Foundation, Public Broadcasting Service,
City University of New York, the Benton
Foundation, and the US Department of Agriculture.
A more complete biography can be found at
http://www.groupjazz.com/html/gj-lisa-bio.html |
Rich
Cowan president of ‘Organizers’
Collaborative’
http://www.organizenow.net/
Rich Cowan has bachelors and masters
degrees in computer science from M.I.T and
ten years of experience working in political
campaigns or social change organizations.
Organizers' Collaborative provides technology
tools and networking resources to activists
all across the U.S., including DemocracyGroups.org,
a social change email list directory, and
Organizers Database, a software program
designed for community organizers and small
nonprofits without in-house technology skills.
Prior to founding Organizers' Collaborative,
Rich worked as academic computer support
specialist, a database consultant, an adjunct
faculty member, a newspaper editor, and
as a nonprofit founder. He also Rich started
the Center for Campus Organizing from 1991-7,
making extensive use of the Internet to
network progressive students and faculty.
Rich was also one of the main organizers
of the 1985 Scientists' Pledge in which
7000 scientsts in the U.S. refused to participate
in the Strategic Defense Initiative ("Star
Wars") program. Rich has written articles
for Responsive Philanthropy, Techsoup.org,
and he has spoken at several conferences
on Technology for Community Organizing,
including the InfoTAP/Waitt conference in
San Diego in December 2002. |
|
Kawakami Takashi
Associate Professor at Dept. of Language
and Communication, Hiroshima International
University
He specializes in mass-communication studies
and media-access studies. A former newspaper
journalist and a researcher concentrating
on broadcasting companies, his research
focused on “public access” and how citizens
can transmit information through the broadcast
media, i.e. television and radio.
His studies concentrated on North America,
Europe and Australia.
|
| Yoshimoto
Hideko
Associate Professor at Faculty of International
Studies, Yamaguchi Prefectural University
She used to work as a free lance journalist
on the west coast of the USA. She is going
to lecture on the biased approach of mass
media (e.g. war-related news after the September
11th tragedy) and how we can unearth the
truth. |
| Hamada
Tadahisa
The Chair of JCAFE
After helping create information networks
among NGOs during the Gulf War in 1991,
he started to establish an organization
which would work as a base for NGOs’
computer networking. He founded Japan Computer
Access For Empowerment (JCAFE) which helps
facilitate the use of the Internet among
NPOs and NGOs. He has also made suggestions
relating to the information society from
the citizen’s point of view. His target
is to create an information society in which
people can live in comfort. |
|
| Inquiries |
| JCAFE,
Hiroshima Office
Tel: 070-5522-5375
Fax: 81-20-4665-8261
E-mail journey@jcafe.net
General Symposium Inquiries;
Japan Computer Access for Empowerment
(JCAFE)
206 Koushin Bld. 2-2-5 Enraku-cho, Chiyoda-ku,
Tokyo, 101-0064, Japan
TEL&FAX 81-3-3291-0512
E-mail sympo03-info@jcafe.net
(for enquiries regarding the symposium only)
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SPONSORS
-The Toyota Foundation
-Tokyo Metropolitan Government
CO-SPONSORS
- Syutoken Co-op Cosumers' Cooperative Union
-NEC
-Chuo Labour Bank
SUPPORTED by
- Internet Association Japan
-Japan Science and Technology Agency
-Japan NPO Center
-Nippon Keidanren 1% Club
-The Japan Society for Studies of Voluntary Activities
ASSISTED by
-NPO Support Center Japan
-C's = Coalition for Legislation to Support Citizens' Organizations
-JCA-NET
-PRIFE (People's Research Institute on Energy and Environment)
-CPSR/Japan
-Shapla Neer
-Mell Project (Media Expression, learning and Literacy Project)
-21 Seiki Shakai Design Lab.
-Media Study Group
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