Hi Richard,

This is not really an unusual way: in fact, most of our campaigns are 
locally-based because of language and culture barriers. While Commons is 
multilingual, most discussions (including this one) happen in English, a 
language most people in the world actually don't speak.

The heritage lists are also not a 'some degree' dependency but a major one: 
organising contest without lists will result in a mess of photos that someone 
needs to categorise manually. It's not easy to sort pictures from places you 
have never seen with descriptions in a language you don't understand. Thus I 
can hardly imagine how we can sustainably organise contests in places where 
local volunteers don't want to work on them.

The only international heritage lists that exist are the UNESCO ones. I can 
imagine a campaign dedicated to UNESCO world heritage monuments in different 
countries. We had such an experience with UNESCO Biosphere Reserves for Wiki 
Loves Earth, which was moderately successful (a few hundred uploads and some 
interesting places that were not pictured before). It is something that can be 
attempted, but of course it cannot really replace Wiki Loves Monuments with its 
national contests.

Mykola (User:NickK)
Wiki Loves Monuments Ukraine & Wiki Loves Earth international team

21 січня 2024, 20:09:58, від "Pharos" <[email protected]>:

I think some of the tensions might be reduced if WLM and similar photo drives 
were in future structured less around "national" contests, and "national" 
teams. This is a somewhat unusual way to organize activities in our movement, 
and I think alternatives might be possible, even as we rely to some degree on 
state heritage lists. 
Thanks,
Richard
(User:Pharos)

On Sun, Jan 21, 2024 at 4:50 AM Bodhisattwa <[email protected]> wrote:
Totally agreed with Alexey. We are not supposed to judge and sanction people 
based on what their governments are doing. Our focus should completely remain 
on how to digitally preserve built heritage of our regions in a better way, 
keeping aside geopolitical conflicts and differences. If we want to drag world 
politics and play UN here, then the "international" part of the competition 
will be gone soon as no country in this world is a piece of heaven fallen from 
the sky; geopolitical conflicts are everywhere, even if they are not visible as 
wars.  
WLM is a collaborative international project and it should welcome any country 
willing to document their heritage. There should be no exception! 

Regards,
Bodhisattwa

On Sun, Jan 21, 2024, 12:28 Aleksey Chalabyan <[email protected]> wrote:
Dear all,  
I wanted to add my 2 cents, since I'll be at another wikimedia call and will 
miss this call (or most of it) and since last time I followed principle of 
least drama. 

I am seriously afraid stepping into this territory will open a Pandora's box 
with dozens of requests to exclude this or that country, arbitration of those 
requests etc, making organisation of WLM, WLE and any other international 
cooperation much, much less pleasent and if doable per se. It will fill more 
like all-against-all UN session or international court - then a collaborative, 
friendly place to make a wiki photo contest to get more free photos of 
monuments from every corner of the world.

Unfortunately, there are many wars and conflicts, and many cultural genocides. 
Some get more media coverage, some less. But there will be a long line of 
countries to ban if we go there. And if we do - I personally, will add couple 
more countries to the top of the list, with a sound proofs of decades of 
cultural genocide done by them. 

Also there are countries with great track of preserving monuments, even if 
those are of another culture/religion, no wars started in centuries, but very 
poor track record of human rights in general, and let's say woman and LGBT 
rights in particular. Are those countries "good enough to play with us" or not? 

How about cases where monuments are preserved but culturally apropriated? How 
about millitary suppliers and military allies of countries we'll ban? How about 
countries where UNESCO officials were caught bribed by regimes to cover up acts 
of cultural genocide? How about UNESCO itself? 
How far do we go in our Wiki Loves Justice campaign? 

I mention no country name now on purpose, to preserve comfortable collaborative 
environment and not make anyone feel like they needs to defend themselves. I 
believe any true Wikimedian in good standing should feel safe and comfortable 
here for our international cooperation to be possible. Even if their 
governments and military do unforgivable and unforgettable crimes - as we 
speak, or a year, 10 or 100 years ago. 

That's not how and where we should punish those governments and regimes. And 
let's be frank they won't care. We'd just go far away from our mission and make 
our lives worse - less fun and less meaningful, and the only part we'd punish 
will be victims on the other side. 

P.S. Sorry for long letter, was short on time. (c)

Love and peace,
Aleksey a.k.a Xelgen

2024 թ. հնվ 21, կիր, 5:07 effe iets anders <[email protected]> օգտատերը 
գրել է․
Hi Illia, 
thanks for letting us know. I understand the constraints you must be dealing 
with, and I wish we could have announced this earlier (not limited to your 
situation - this is desirable for other reasons too). Please know that it was 
not our intention to announce it last minute, but that we realized too late 
that time was running out for this in the way I explained. Hopefully we can 
indeed better meet the timeliness expectations going forward. 

Lodewijk

On Fri, Jan 19, 2024 at 1:04 PM Ilya Korniyko <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi Lodewijk, 

WLM Ukraine's organizing team is interested in this discussion, but it's 
difficult to find time for it on such a short notice -- because of the armed 
conflict most Ukrainian Wikimedians have to simultaneously fit into their 
agendas their main work, Wikimedia volunteering and activities we have to do 
because of the war. For example, I have an emergency casualty care training 
this Sunday, and another team member cannot join because she goes to a training 
area for drills on the same day. 

We ask that you take these circumstances into consideration and notify us in 
advance in the future.

Regards,
Illia

On Wed, Jan 17, 2024 at 2:23 AM effe iets anders <[email protected]> 
wrote:
Hi all,

(with apologies for the delay in sending this announcement)
This email discusses a sensitive topic of armed conflict, and may contain 
triggers for some of our community members. While we appreciate your input, 
please prioritize your own mental wellbeing and don't feel obligated to respond 
or participate. I have tried to frame this as sensitively as possible, but 
welcome constructive suggestions on how to do this better off-list. 

Summary: On Sunday 21 January (08:00 PST, 16:00 UTC), the international team of 
Wiki Loves Monuments will organize an office hour/community conversation on: 
How should an international federated photo competition like WLM handle 
national teams, international finalists and communication in the case of 
geopolitical armed conflict. We will announce the link later, and you can 
register here: 
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Wiki_Loves_Monuments_2023/Office_hour
  

Topic: In the past years, our communities have been confronted with the 
question how to deal with a number of geopolitical armed conflicts. This 
question came up in the past years in a few different ways: whether photos of 
heritage from certain countries should be allowed to be represented or compete 
in international competitions like Wiki Loves Monuments, whether and how photos 
of heritage in disputed areas can participate (especially when that dispute 
becomes an armed conflict) and there are probably more ways ahead that various 
armed conflicts can make an international competition and communication about 
the competition complex. There is no question whether human and cultural 
destruction is desirable, and every war is likely one too many. 

Why now: It is particularly hard to discuss these sensitive topics when they 
are current: it is a painful conversation for everyone to have, especially 
because the people who are living through the real-life consequences are given 
an additional burden of engaging in these discussions, under the pressure of 
time. 

For this reason I believe it would be helpful to discuss this topic without 
focusing on a specific conflict - but rather to discuss principles. How would 
we, generally speaking, international competitions such as Wiki Loves Monuments 
like to be influenced by armed conflict? Are there guidelines that they could 
maintain? At this point, we don't know who the winners of Wiki Loves Monuments 
are, and we can still have an abstract conversation. I don't expect this 
conversation to conclude right away, but hope that we can continue it in a few 
months after the dust of the winning images has settled. 

While this is already very soon, we have settled on Sunday 21 January, 16:00 
UTC to avoid getting too close to the announcement of international winners.

Framing: Some questions that come to mind as useful conversation starters would 
include:
* Under what conditions could or should a national team be disqualified from 
participating in an international federated activity such as WLM? 
* If yes, who should make the decision whether to disqualify, and using what 
criteria? Who should they consult?
* Under what conditions could or should the national submissions be 
disqualified, if a national competition already has taken place? 
* Should the international team make efforts to not appear to support an armed 
conflict when communicating about the competition, or even previous events? 
What are some guidelines that they could follow? 

I would invite others to contribute in framing a constructive conversation 
(publicly or privately - when in doubt, just email me privately). 

Conversation timeline: We want this to be the start of a constructive community 
conversation with national organizers, international organizers and other 
community members who feel they can constructively contribute. We welcome 
contributions from organizers of other similar international 
competitions/activities. The conversation will be in English but if there is 
sufficient interest, we can see if we can organize translation resources in 
future conversations. You can sign up here: 
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Commons:Wiki_Loves_Monuments_2023/Office_hour
 . Please do sign up, in case we have to share the link privately.

As mentioned, I don't expect this conversation to be "one and done". It's a 
first step, and I expect to follow up with a next conversation in a few months, 
and again around Wikimania - if there is sufficient interest. 

I will guide this conversation as a former WLM international team member and a 
current advisor.  

Warmly,
Lodewijk
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