“Crowdsharing” and Violence Prevention

One thing I'm working on in my doctoral research is understanding why crowdsourcing works in conflict management and resolution...or should at least logically work based on the various theories of conflict management and resolution developed and refined over the last 40 or so years.  In this post, I'm going to use Kenyan election violence as … Continue reading “Crowdsharing” and Violence Prevention

The Impact of Tech: Getting Past ‘Good Versus Bad’

The emergent theme from my travels this summer presenting academic papers on tech for social change hasn’t been “is it good or bad,” but instead “why are their good and bad outcomes, and can these be generalizable?” It’s this kind of question that motivates me as a political scientist.  Yes, indeed technology can be used … Continue reading The Impact of Tech: Getting Past ‘Good Versus Bad’

Crowdsourcing Done Well: A follow up from yesterday’s post

Yesterday's post may have been a bit of a downer given the critical position on crowdsourcing that I took.  While I think a critical eye is necessary to grow the space, I wouldn't want to leave out what's being done well.  With that in mind I wanted to point folks to Patrick Meier's recent post … Continue reading Crowdsourcing Done Well: A follow up from yesterday’s post