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[DW] Misc - Vote for The Top 10 Who Are Changing the World of Politics Online

Steven Clift
Tue, 09 Aug 2005 07:40:26 -0700

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I nominated Issues Forum and Tim Erickson for all of his work with
both Issues Forums and online efforts of the Deliberative Democracy
Consortium.  Someone else must have tossed my name in the mix.  So
vote for Issues Forums
<http://e-democracy.org/uk> if like what is emerging with that effort
and hold your nose with my name. :-)

Cheers,
Steven Clift

P.S. Speaking of Issues Forums, we are seeking the next wave of new
communities in the UK, the US and beyond. Interested? Join LiftOff:
http://forums.e-democracy.org/factory/groups/liftoff


Vote at:
http://politicsonline.com/content/main/specialreports/2005/top10_2005/
vote.asp
Or:
http://tinyurl.com/7qktw


The results from the call for nominations are in and now we are
asking you to select your favorite choice from the list of 20
finalists for the Top Ten Who Are Changing The World of Internet &
Politics vote, sponsored by PoliticsOnline and the 6th annual E-
Democracy Worldwide Forum.

This year marked the toughest year ever in choosing the 20 finalists.
The integration of politics and the Internet has spread like wildfire
around the globe, reflected in this year's diverse, international
nominees.

The winners, those top 10 nominees who receive the most votes, will
be announced at the 6th annual Worldwide Forum on Electronic
Democracy -- September 28-29, in Issy-les-Moulineaux, (Paris,
France).

Please review the 20 finalists below and then select one of the
following as your choice for the Top Politics & Internet World
Changer of 2005.


The Nominees

Accenture eDemocracy Services UK
www.accenture.com
The Accenture eDemocracy Services (AeS) UK team have spent the last
five years wholly dedicated to the delivery of e-democracy and
electoral modernization.Using state-of-the-art technology, the team
has made it more convenient for millions of citizens around the world
to engage with government. The UK team approaches each project from
the citizen's perspective to help bring the concept of 'citizen-
centric' government one step closer to reality. AeS has worked
closely with Sheffield City Council on the development and deployment
of new Citizen Relationship Management models and has helped the City
to achieve 'Best UK Local Authority of 2005'. The team has also co-
founded the OASIS' Election Technical Committee which aims to render
election data standard internationally transparent. AeS has
undertaken key roles in the UK's National e-Democracy and Election
Modernization strategic projects, and was awarded European Union Best
Practice status in May 2003.

John Aravosis/Americablog
americablog.blogspot.com
With multi-faceted expertise in law, politics, journalism, and public
relations, John Aravosis is one of the nation's foremost Internet
political strategists. His clients range from the US Department of
State to Planned Parenthood and America's top civil rights
organizations. His AMERICAblog.org, created in 2004, has received
huge amounts of attention as one of the top liberal blogs . Mr.
Aravosis launched the very successful StopDrLaura.com campaign in
February 2000. Mr. Aravosis has also taken the lead in other high-
profile gay rights cases, including the Timothy McVeigh AOL privacy
case (1998), Matthew Shepard Online Resources (1998-99), and most
recently his efforts to stop the anti-gay federal constitutional
amendment with DontAmend.com and DearMary.com (2003-04).

BBC Action Network
www.bbc.co.uk/dna/actionnetwork/
The BBC launched its new Action Network in late June. Formerly iCan,
the redesign is the result of 18 months of testing the site and
redeveloping in response to user needs. iCan helped citizens connect
with each other through public forums and a "democracy database"
packed with information on tips for grassroots campaigning and the
legislative process. The new Action Network makes it even easier for
users to find and connect with other like-minded people in their
community. New additions include alerts, syndication, and a revised
user interface. BBC Action Network's aim is to enhance the
overwhelming feeling of empowerment users report in using the site to
take responsibility for issues they care about.

Etienne Chouard
etienne.chouard.free.fr
Mr. Chouard is an example of how an ordinary citizen can voice his
opinion on the Internet and ultimately change international politics.
A high school law teacher, Chouard set up a blog protesting the
proposed EU constitution and urged others to vote against it as well.
Just before the vote, his blog had gained attention across France and
received over 25,000 hits per day. Despite pro-constitution support
from political leaders and a huge media campaign, Mr. Chouard and his
supporters triumphed when voters ultimately rejected the
constitution. Mr. Chouard of course cannot be given all of the credit
for the constitution's defeat, but his blog is one of the most
successful examples of Internet grassroots activism.

Ciudad Politica
www.ciudadpolitica.org
The Spanish-speaking Portal for Political Analysis and Information
Ciudad Politica is an independent portal promoting the development of
political science in Latin America. The portal aims at supporting the
political science community and provides communication forums and
creating a network among institutions, civil society and politics.
Students, journalists, politicians, scholars and civil servants
debate, write articles and papers in the several home-page forums.

Steven Clift and Local E-Democracy Issues Forum
e-democracy.org/uk
Steven Clift is an activist for the spread of e-Democracy and the
chairman of the Local E-Democracy Issues Forum. The Local Issues
Forum seeks to create a medium for citizens to discuss local
problems, communicate and organize. Tested in England, the project
proved successful as each community met or exceeded recruitment
goals, with over 30% of subscribers posting public comments on a
diversity of local issues. With its success, plans have already been
made to increase the Issues Forum's audience and capabilities.

Adam Curry
live.curry.com
Adam Curry's ingenious fusion of Internet and Ipod technology has
earned him the title the "Ed Sullivan of podcasting". Podcasting
changes the way people receive music, news, and other information. By
simply subscribing to individual podcasts, MP3 users can have new
files automatically downloaded to their players. A former MTV veejay,
Curry has his own music podcast. Podcasting has been adapted for
other uses and now affects the way people receive not just music, but
news and information as well.

Hossein Derakhshan
hoder.com
Hossein's award-winning blog "Editor: Myself" was started in
September 2001 and advocates using the Internet to bring social and
political change to Iran. Houssein was born in Iran, and now lives in
Canada. Editor: Myself contains step-by-step instructions in Persian
on how visitors to his site can start their own blogs, giving some
credit Houssein for the thousands of new Iranian blogs, many of which
promote democracy and free speech in a historically repressive
society. His website contains blogs in English, Persian, a photoblog,
and a stop.censoring.us blog.

Digital Divide Network
www.digitaldividenetwork.org
DDN is the largest Internet resource providing information regarding
the digital divide and strategies on how to close it. It features
several different communities/topics, including Tsunami aid/how to
use the Internet for disaster relief, E-government, and literacy.
Virtual meeting rooms allow activists to communicate in real time and
plan events. DDN promotes global discussion on this important issue
and currently has over 7,000 members from 115 countries

Estonia
www.riigikantselei.ee
Estonia has the most advanced information infrastructure of any
formerly communist eastern European state, and on June 28, 2005, the
Estonian Parliament approved Internet voting for local elections in
October 2005 and national Parliamentary elections in 2007. Developed
by IT services company Cybernetica for the Estonian National
Electoral Committee, the Internet voting system uses the Estonian
electronic ID card to identify voters. Over 50% of citizens today
hold such a card and, according to the government, every Estonian
citizen will have an electronic ID card by the end of 2006.
Dubbed E-Stonia by some, the country has ranked near the top of the
list of countries in putting the Net to practical use – ranking as
high as No. 2 in Internet banking and third in e-government in a
recent World Economic Forum report.

Dan Gillmor
bayosphere.com/blog/dangillmor
Gillmor left his job at the San Jose Mercury News to focus on
blogging rights and grassroots journalism. He has since become a
major, well-respected grassroots advocate, urging bloggers to be
aware and protective of their rights. He has published a book on the
subject called "We the Media", and supports Creative Commons, a
nonprofit that offers flexible copyrights/protection for writers and
artists. He also has a daily blog to keep bloggers updated on
grassroots policies and copyright laws.

The Hansard Society
www.hansardsociety.org.uk
With over 60 years of experience in monitoring and supporting the
work of the UK's elected representatives, institutions and
government, the Hansard Society has been instrumental in the
development of e-democracy over the last decade. Combining
creativity, business-acumen and knowledge of the wider political
context, the Society's e-Democracy resources and patronage have
helped create a vibrant new field in UK politics.
During the 2005 general election, the Society provided coaching and
technical support to bring homeless people into mainstream politics
through the use of weblogs. The Society's publications have a
reputation for cultivating high-quality research and debate,
accessible to the expert and casual observer alike.

Institute for Politics, Democracy & the Internet
www.ipdi.org
During its six years' existence, the Institute has established a
national and international reputation as the premier center for the
study of the Internet's effect on politics, producing practical
studies that address the larger questions about the Internet and
politics
IPDI's staff have developed materials during that time that have
helped academics, advocates, and practitioners understand the
potential power of this new and evolving technology. The variety of
scholars, real world political operatives and the Politics On Line
Conference make them on of the most unique and comprehensive actors
in the field of politics and the Internet. The Institute provides a
balance of dreamers and data driven realists who tell us what we know
and help push us to contemplate a variety of ideas and concepts we
should get to know.

JibJab Media Inc.
www.jibjab.com
JibJab's 'This Land' animation was one of the most memorable parts of
the 2004, combining humor and the Internet to make a political
splash. Over 60 million people saw the online animated skit, which
poked fun at both campaigns, highlighting both the issues and the mud-
slinging. With so many people watching and passing the piece around,
'This Land' engaged potential voters in a way that the news media did
not, relying solely on individual Internet and e-mail communication.

Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva
www.lula.org.br
During his tenure as Brazil's President da Silva has worked hard to
take free software to Brazil's poorest citizens. One project includes
opening thousands of community computer hubs where Brazilians will
surf the Web, access government services, and take computing
courses—all on PCs loaded with free software. Another initiative,
called PC Conectado, or Connected PC, aims at helping low-income
families buy their first computers and get on the Internet—once
again, on PCs equipped only with free software. Da Silva is also an
ardent advocate of free software based on open source code that users
can study and modify. The result is that in recent years Brazil has
become one of the world's most prominent battlegrounds of the
Microsoft Windows versus Linux war.

Mozambique E-gov
www.govnet.gov.mz
In an attempt improve government communication and public services,
Mozambique has established an e-government project linking 15
national public administration entities in Maputo. The ministries now
share a unified e-mail system, intranet and document management
system, as well as cost-effective shared access to the Internet. A
new government Web portal has also been launched intended to increase
public access to information. Once complete, the network will connect
approximately 10 000 government workers and 7 500 workstations.
GovNet's ultimate purpose is national coordination on projects to
encourage growth and reduce poverty.

Pambazuka
www.pambazuka.org
Pambazuka is an online newsletter promoting social change and
development in Africa. It reaches over 60,000 people worldwide every
week, keeping them updated on African human rights, conflict, health,
environment, social welfare, development, and the Internet. The
Pambazuka site promotes grassroots activism with links to fundraising
organizations and petition sites, and viewers also have the option of
texting their opinions to government numbers provided by Pambazuka.

RedState.org
www.redstate.org
RedState.org is another excellent example of grassroots internet
activism, providing a place for Republicans to not only receive news
updates and read articles, but voice their own opinions as well.
RedState.org describes itself as a community, where each registered
user can post information in his or her own diary and interact with
each other. RedState.org's popularity and innovative approach to
blogging has made it a well-deserved political hotsite.

Norodom Sihanouk (The Blogger King)
www.norodomsihanouk.info
The ex-king of Cambodia is 82 years and battling cancer, but neither
age nor illness have stopped him from blogging. For three years
Sihanouk has promoted free speech and democracy through his blog,
which receives over 1,000 visitors each day. He shares his opinions
on everything from entertainment to Cambodian politics to gay
marriage, and has attracted international attention.

Tsunami Help Blog
tsunamihelp.blogspot.com
The Tsunami Help Blog centralizes information and news about ongoing
relief efforts for the countries affected by the December 2004
tsunami. The site provides a search resource for missing persons, a
help needed/help offered posting board enabling greater organization
and communication, and a database of helplines from all over the
world. The site has reunited missing persons with their friends and
families through posted photos and information, and proves that the
Internet can increasingly be used for global relief efforts

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  • [DW] Misc - Vote for The Top 10 Who Are Changing the World of Politics Online Steven Clift