COMMUNITIES AND
CIVIL PORTALS: �WHAT FOR?
THINKING ABOUT
INTERNET FROM A SOCIAL POINT OF VIEW
Rub�n Araya Tagle[1]
1.
Introduction.
During the last years the World Wide Web has experimented an explosive growth, to a great
extend as a consequence of the influence from de commercial sector, and to a
lesser one from efforts made by governmental entities, academic institutions,
and from civil society organizations and networks in order to take advantage of
the opportunities and benefits that this new medium may offer to them. Within
this context, it has not been unusual the turning up and development of a
multiplicity of experiences that get installed on the web as portals and online
services oriented towards what may be called the �social� or �civic�
world. Many of these initiatives have emerged within the framework of
educational policies and Estate modernization, some others have been fostered
by international or multilateral organisms, non for profit foundations and
agencies for cooperation within the context of different projects and programs,
while others have been the end result of the work made by civil society
organizations looking forward to articulate their networks y to coordinate heir
actions around common grounds.
2.
�Why asking for portals and virtual civil communities?
Portals and virtual communities, as we know them
today, constitute entities of recent appearance on the web. In fact, before the
commercial boom of Internet portals were practically limited to news pages by
the ISPs, catalogues and search engines that served as integrating fields for
the available information on the web, whereas the virtual communities developed
themselves mainly as flows in communication networks with a high degree of
segmentation and differentiation through newsgroups and interest groups.
However, with the progressive increment in users and available information, and
mostly as a result of the expansion of commercial services on the web, portals
have been proliferating and diversifying adopting several communicating and service
models, as well as integrating also some linking elements the previously were
appropriate to online communities. The turning popular of this new concept of
portals as infocommunicational organizers oriented to create virtual
communities has had a great influence on the dominant discourses and
actions within the named �civil Internet�[2]. In fact,
analogous to what has happened with the initiatives that promote the universal
access, where communitarian infocenters
and telecenters are often conceived as standard instruments,
civil portals have occupy a preponderant place on the
discourses and actions that try to respond to what many have considered the
second key problem to solve after connectivity: the �lack of public social infoestructure�.
Nevertheless, the great enthusiasm brought back by
these instruments, impregnated with a some technological determinism, that often mixes up the
technological characteristics with its possible uses and implementations, looks
as if forgets that behind computers and telecommunication systems are actual
actors and power structures and social exclusion. Is in this context that from
the civil society have emerged critical views that question certain aspects of
the conception and design that some of these tools, expressing the need to
subordinate any consideration about their pertinence and relevance to a
previous analysis about the results, effects and social impact that may be obtained from them, as well as
their requirements, conditionals and assumptions under which it is considered
feasible, viable and desirable.
Thus, the question about communities and civic portals
appears framed within a discussion more global about the meaning of the
initiatives and public policies where they are inserted, which leads to rise
questions such as: �What are the needs or
purposes that these social or civil portals are supposed to contribute or might
contribute to? �How do they might turn into useful tools to support actions and
infocommunicational actual processes at the civil level? �How and in what
conditions do they might help in improving the digital inclusion and thus to
contribute to social development and strengthening democracy?
3.
�Informational divide or the right to information and communication?
In order to set up these questions in a field of public
policy analysis, it helps to take a more general view on the public
social infoestructure and the
ways that that can be seen as subject of policies, considering both principles
and actions involved in it. To do so we adopt as angular stone the premises of
the so called �social vision of Internet� [3],
in which it is questioned the concept of digital divide stating that at the
roots of the problem of technological exclusion lie the social, economic,
political and cultural divides present within and between societies. In
particular, we want to look deeply into the concept of �digital inclusion�[4]
at the level referred to the use and social empowerment of the information
and communication media.
Looking into the mail experiences and debates related
to this subject, we found that like it occurs around definitions of digital
divide, it is possible to distinguish here a couple of streams or main
views[5]:
-
A dominant view that considers that, once
the issue of access is overcome, the main challenge that remains to solve is
what can be called the informational
divide, which shows itself as a deficit
in the development of the social infoestructure of public character. Hence,
its priority is centered around promoting
the development and production of contents, services and applications social
and culturally relevant for the population, having as ruling guideline the �universalization of the access to public
information and to civil services�, with emphasis on the more vulnerable
or excluded sectors of society. The assumption behind this approach is
that, once the public social infoestructure is set in place, the conditions
will be given allowing people to equitably make use of the advantages and
benefits derived from the access to Internet, improving their possibilities of
accessing education, information and knowledge, incrementing their labor and
economic opportunities, and facilitating their participation into the public
affaires of their communities.
-
An alternative view that states that
behind the informational divide exists a structural state of
dependency and subordination whose social, economic, political and cultural
causes are the same that the ones that originate the digital divide. This
situation manifests itself as social inequalities at the level of ability to
access, to use and the empowerment of the information and communication media,
which in turn produces that the development of the IT in general become hegemonized
by the interests and perspectives of the dominant groups that concentrate
its property and control.
-
Hence the priority should be to stimulate the
participative, universal, democratic access and inclusive to the
information and to the communication technologies and media, having as a
ruling guideline the �universalization of
the rights to information and
communication� [6],
with emphasis on the protection and enlargement of public domain. Under
this approach it is assumed that the informational divide most be
tackled together with the other divides that hinder access, use and equitable
and solidary social empowerment of these technologies and media, in order
to brake this vicious circle.
By contrasting both approaches it makes it manifest
that, although the universalization of public information and of civic
services be a relevant aspect to make it possible for the public social
infoestructure to respond at needs, interests, ambitions and expectations of
society as a whole, it is not a matter of a principle in itself but only a
medium.
In addition it results evident that the mere availability
of contents and services �to� the people is not and it can not be enough to
produce significant transformations over the inequality status related to the social
empowerment of the media and the information and communication technologies,
therefore the approach of developing the social infoestructure �top
down�, as it is currently defined, at the end only reproduces the informational
divide, and does not guarantee its democratic, participative, inclusive and
universal character.
Taking off from this difference at the level of the
problem and the enunciated principles, these approaches follow different paths
when proposing actions to tackle them:
-
To the dominant vision the principal actions
to undertake are related with the development
of electronic services addressed to citizens from organisms and institutions
that administer, manage and supply information and/or public services
(governmental entities, public services, academic and educational institutions
and private sector with some public orientation). In addition, it is also
suggested the need to carry out actions
of educational community aimed at facilitating the access and massive use of
contents and available services by people, as well as promoting the development of portals and other digital media with local
content and services letting the telecenters, infocenters and other initiatives
of communitarian infocommunication to have a basic social infoestructure in
agreement with the needs and interests of their communities.
-
From the
perspective of the alternative vision, these actions are not and
cannot be enough to solve the root problems. Thus, while in the dominant vision
the media and information and communication technologies are conceived as resources for the people be able to access
information and public services, assuming roles as receptors, beneficiaries,
customers or consumers, on the other
hand in the alternative vision it is assumed that in order that these
instruments to enable empowerment and human development, it is required that them
could be handled by those who use them. Hence the efforts should be
oriented to provide the conditions in order that the different people,
groups and communities may actively participate the management and control
of the information and communication technologies, media and resources, assuming roles as broadcasters, producers
and developers, both individually and collectively. For that it is needed
to delineate more comprehensive strategies for intervention that, in addition
to minding for providing contents and universal electronic services, embody a
broad set of actions, among which stand out:
-
Strengthening of
public domain through the creation of global collective goods that guarantee
the universal access to information and communication.
-
Fostering non-for
profit networks and electronic collectives that assure the production and open,
plural and diverse flow of public information and relevant y contents for human
development.
-
Promoting
participative initiatives �from� and �towards� the community that include the
traditional and innovative use of communication and tools for information
management, especially at a local level.
-
Educative and
training actions that enable the overcoming of technical, cultural and
linguistic barriers for the use and social empowerment of information and
communication technologies and media, and to contribute to develop new
technological imaginaries and social capabilities from identities and local,
regional and national cultural perspectives.
-
Promoting the
development of alternative, open and free information and communication
technologies, in order to store and integrate technological know-how and
communicational practices from the diverse communities and groups, with
emphasis on the communitarian level.
In this approach
it is also assumed as a priority need the active participation in these
actions, both at executing them as well as its design and evaluation, by
diverse actors that from de dominant vision play a role somewhat secondary or
subordinated, like civil society organizations, local governments, micromedia,
and communitarian radios, telecenters and infocenters, academic and educational
sectors and non for profit private sector, among others.
4.
Portals and virtual communities for a civilian Internet.
Even if the subject of the instruments, modalities
and methodologies had not been explicitly developed within the precedent
discussion to undertake policies related to the social infoestructure,
the aspects that have been referred to are enough to clarify as to retake the original
question about the portals and civil communities, and to provide some
interpretative hints about its meaning and potential role from the social
vision about Internet.
There are many different definitions and descriptions
about what portals and virtual communities are, the majority of which focus
themselves enunciating and typifying the content and services offered to their
users. The more theoretical approximations often
emphasize the new dimensions of usage and interactions being possible due to the
technology applied, stressing aspects such as de media and service integration
as a result of information digitalizing, the ability to select information
and personalization enabled by information processing, remote
interactivity and time and space globalization facilitated by
electronic networks, among others. However, what the majority of these
definitions leave behind is that portals and virtual communities actually
existent are electronic means of social intermediation that,
beyond the theoretical potentialities of technology, have been intentionally
designed and modeled as applications to certain purposes. That means that they
are not neutrals nor transparent, since their conceptions imply different organizational
models and social integration, which define role structures, rules
and control mechanisms, which in turn frame and link several weaves of social
relationships among social players of the real world. From this it is concluded
that the approach and the options that implicit or explicitly adopted to
understand and to organize the social spaces were these tools are applied, will
have deep implications and consequences both on the conception and development
of the technological devices and their know-how and associated imaginaries, as
well as the results, effects and social impacts that can be obtained from them,
demarcating the usefulness that they might have related to specific policies or
strategies.[7].
The prevalent approach of commercial portals have a
close relationship with the liberal paradigm and the market logic, emphasizing
the implementation of business models from as individualistic conception about
what is social (the audiences as multitude of atomized individuals), an
approach that privilege the quantitative over the qualitative (attracting the
maximum possible audience), with a strong rationalistic bias (segmenting,
differentiating and identifying the users with specific contents and services)
and an instrumentalist vision of the action (retaining and making the users
loyal giving them something in exchange).
Many communities and portals that approach aspects
related to social development and public interest have look forward to make it
explicit their differentiation related to the previous approach, proposing the
notion of a �civilian Internet�, as an alternative space to the �commercial
Internet�. On this line we find both state experiences and the wide spectrum of
the civil society, in addition to the great amount of small projects and
initiatives at the communitarian level. However, the plurality of models and
the very polysemy of the term �citizenship� make it difficult to find out
elements and common meanings among them. In the face of it, it can be question:
What concepts, values and practices about �the social� and/or �the civil� are
implied in them? �How are built and organized the functional and power
structures on their models of management? �What capability of affecting has
their different participants over the information and the very media and
technologies used? In the majority of portals of the state sector predominate
the assistance and universalistic approaches, centered on the
supply of electronic public services to the citizens and, to a lesser scale, on
aspects such as the provision of public information aimed at the transparence
and accountability, and the generation of closed channels of individual
communication between citizens and the government[8].
These models often emphasize the notion of e-government above e-citizenship or e-democracy, blending
modalities of internal organization based on the creation of intergovernmental
networks (the Network- Estate), with
traditional and bureaucratic modalities of relating to users based on
hierarchical
structures and centralized schemes of the control and communication. This approach
shares with the commercial portals the adoption of am individualistic
conception of people more as customers than as citizens, which
determines a �provider-user�. On the other hand, within the civil society there
are a great variety of experiences about portals, communities and networks that
have developed some alternative models, where it is stressed the uses for
building practice communities, to create alternative mediatic channels and to
organize political campaigns, among others[9].
The approaches used have been diverse, but in general
they have as common denominator the use of a cooperative logic, which aims to
generate structures more horizontal and decentralized and distributed schemes
of communication and control, with collective and flexible modalities of
relationship that combine interdependency with autonomy of each one of their
parts.
Where to place the sphere of �the civilian�?
Undoubtedly the time period in which we all live is signed by the ever
increasing politic-economic globalization and socio-cultural fragmentation, it
is not possible to continue defining citizenship exclusively in relation
to the concepts of Estate and nation, nor could it be reduced to the formal
sphere of the rights, duties, regulations, procedures and social benefits. ��
As currently configured, the civil sphere
encompasses every space and dimension where the public agenda are built
and decisions about public issues are made, intersecting the local,
national, regional and global stages, and implying at several levels every
actual social player from different sectors that plays in this dominion (state
sector, private sector, civil society).
From this approximation, we can define in generic
terms the portals and civil virtual communities as collective virtual
spaces socially enabled in order to take part in the public spheres. The
aim of these spaces would be to contribute to the generation of social
and/or political effects in the real world, so a central aspect is that who
participate in it be actual citizens and social players with interests
and relationships in it, in order that their virtual interactions might
traduce themselves into agreements, practices and actions on non virtual
spaces.
According to this definition, not every portal and
virtual community affiliated to the so-called �civilian Internet� is properly
speaking �civilian�. And there are also many others that would be included
within this category, even though
from a traditional approach to the public sphere they seem to come
closer to the private because they tackle needs and interests of minorities and
subgroups. The key element for distinction is found at the social
connectivity that these media promote and/or enabled through their
management models, understood as the collective articulating capacity and
that of intervention over actual realities.
Under this definition, and from a social vision about
Internet, portals and civilian virtual communities are profiled as tools
with a great strategic value to promote the development of a democratic,
participative, inclusive and universal public social infoestructure, as
long as they might contribute to coordinate actions and to articulate social
conversations that respond to the needs, expectations, interests and
aspirations of the different people, players, groups and communities at
different levels and spheres of the public space.
Nevertheless, if that is to be possible it would be
needed that the promotion and development of these civilian virtual spaces
constitutes in itself as a priority aspect of policies for development of the public
social infoestructure, and that it be approached from a perspective that
take in account the needs to advance both towards social and technological
empowerment and the strengthening of social rights to information and
communication.
On the other hand, the civilian spaces and
infocommunication media need to have resources and regulatory frameworks
available that respect and preserve their autonomy and independence from
governments and commercial corporations. In this sense, an important
responsibility that belongs to estates is to guarantee the public access to
these technologies and media assigning them and status of universal common
goods.
Burt the development of the civilian Internet
will not be possible within the stated terms unless the citizens also have the capabilities
of access and control over significant technical resources. In this matter,
the possibility to access, manage and administer quality services and
applications and to the empowerment of open and free technical standards,
constitute aspects of particular importance.
Daily
we listen to lectures in which the ICT and Internet are often introduced to us
as self-valued objects that are transforming our lives, thus hiding a great
deal of the creative capability and the right to intervene that we human
beings have on the historic self construction of this technology. In this
paper have been exposed synoptically some reflections that propose an
alternative look and that point out to a focus change about the principles
and orientations of the public policies about Internet and citizenship. In addition this perspective leads us to abandon the
seeing of portals and civilian virtual communities as artifacts
belonging to the digital world inviting us to understand them in its condition
of social builders to the actual world, so that we could be in charge of their
use and benefit as useful tools for the task of transforming among us all our
societies building a better world, not only it constitutes a possibility for
the future, but our responsibility for the present.
[1] Social Investigator, Software Developer and
Multimedia Director. Executive Coordinator of civilian portals
sociedadcivil.cl, ong.cl y conectividadsocial.cl, Project Director of
collaborative �Interacci�n Virtual�, Researcher and faculty at the Universidad
Bolivariana de Chile.
[2] In general terms, by �civilian Internet� we
mean the set of uses and social empowerment of Internet aimed at intervene on
public matters of societies, at the local, national, regional and global
levels.
[3] The "social
vision of Internet" constitutes an alternative approach developed
collectively by several investigators and activists from Latin America and the
Caribbean, framed within a process of reflection about the subject of the digital
divide, information society and the social impact of Internet. This alternative
states that for ICT and Internet be able to contribute to social development
and to reduce the other social divides it is required to simultaneously advance
towards both the equitable access and to the aimed-use and social empowerment
of these technologies, and not only by increasing connectivity. See
�Trabajando la Internet con una visi�n social� (�Working the Internet with a
social vision�), collective document of the Virtual Community MISTICA for the
OLISTICA project, http://funredes.org/mistica/castellano/ciberoteca/tematica/esp_doc_olist2.html.
[4] The �digital
inclusion� promotes the use and social empowerment of the digital
technologies in order to tackle the needs of communities, and to promote the
public policy making, the creation of appropriate knowledge and contents, and
strengthening people capabilities. This way, the digital inclusion contributes
to improve the economic, social, political and personal conditions of the vast
majority, particularly of the poorest and marginalized sectors of society. Op.
Cit. in �Telecentros� �Para qu�? Lecciones sobre Telecentros Comunitarios en
Am�rica Latina y el Caribe� (�Telecenters...What for? Lessons about
Communitarian Telecenters in Latin Ameica and the Caribbean�). Ricardo G�mez,
Karin Delgadillo, Klaus Stoll, 2003. Pan Am�ricas - Fundaci�n Chasquinet -
IDRC. http://tele-centros.org/tcparaque.
[5] This analysis adopts and expands the thesis proposed
in: Mart�nez Juliana, �Visi�n social de la Internet y pol�ticas p�blicas: Ideas
para debatir estrategias de incidencia desde la sociedad civil� (�Social vision
of the Internet and public policies: Ideas for debating strategies for
interventions from civil society�), Fundaci�n Acceso, Agosto 2000, http://www.idrc.ca/pan/panlacjulaant.PDF.
[6] This perspective is being outlined and debated within
the framework of the �Campa�a por los
Derechos de Comunicaci�n en la Sociedad de la Informaci�n� (Campaign for
the Communication Rights in the Information Society�) (CRIS). Their web site
can be found at http://www.crisinfo.org.
[7] Many experiences that have not obtained the expected
results, have just made the mistake of transplanting human activities to the
digital world without considering the complex relationship existing between the
social world and the virtual space, pretending to a great extent to subordinate
the former to the later. Similarly, the discussions �and many time confusions-
commonly posed about what ought to be or not to be incorporated into portals of
a social or civilian character, have to do generally with an overestimate of
these artifacts as if they would be �carriers� of social relationships,
forgetting that they are just a medium to stimulate them.
[8] An analysis on this theme can be found in: "El
Papel del Ciudadano y de las OSC en el e-Gobierno: Un estudio de gobierno
electr�nico en ocho pa�ses de Am�rica Latina y el Caribe" (�The role of
the Citizen and the CSO on the e-government: An study on electronic government
in eight Latin America and the Caribbean countries�). K. Reilly - Ra�l
Echeverr�a. APC, 2003.
[9] A formal description of some of these experiences can
be found in: "Comprender los portales de la sociedad civil: contenidos en
l�nea y modelos comunitarios para el sector de OSC" (�Understanding the
portals of civil society: online contents and communitarian models for the CSO
sector�), M. Surman. APC, 2002.