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OVERCOMING NEGATIVE STEREOTYPESIN THE SOUTH CAUCASUS
Onnik Krikorian
Caucasus Regional Editor, Global Voices
http://www.globalvoicesonline.org
[email protected]
[email protected]
What is Global Voices?
Global Voices is a community of more than 300 bloggers and translators around the world who work together to bring readers reports from blogs and citizen media everywhere, with an emphasis on voices that are not ordinarily heard in the mainstream media.
Global Voices is translated into more than 15 languages by volunteer translators, who have formed the Lingua project. Additionally, Global Voices has an Advocacy website and network to help people speak out online in places where their voices are censored.
We also have an outreach project called Rising Voices to help marginalized communities use citizen media to be heard.
Global Voices Impact
Four websites most consistently account for links between countries: YouTube, Wikipedia, the BBC and, a distant fourth, Global Voices Online. The last of these, launched at Harvard University in 2005 [] works to create links between bloggers in different countries, and to find what it calls bridge bloggers []The Economist, 2 September 2010
Working relationships with BBC, Reuters, Pulitzer Center for Crisis Reporting, La Stampa and many others. Frequently quoted by CNN, BBC, New York Times, The Economist etc.
Nagorno Karabakh
1994 ceasefire
Approx 25,000 dead
Approx 1 million refugees and IDPs
16 percent of Azerbaijan controlled by Armenian forces
Border skirmishes and clashes still occur
Territorial integrity vs. Right to self-determination
Peace deal still elusive
Threat of new war
Armenia & Azerbaijan
[A] negative context [is set] in the public consciousness, which
hinders dialogue and mutual understanding [] Without more accurate
and unbiased information [] free of negative rhetoric and
stereotypes, Armenians and Azerbaijanis will continue to see
themselves as enemies without any common ground.
Report on media in Armenia and Azerbaijan,
Caucasus Resource Research Centers
Perpetuating conflict
[...] people are often inclined to consider their existing attitudes and beliefs to be true and filter the news through this lens. Thus, they accept messages in order to maintain their original perceptions. [] bias in the local media [...] serves as a means to fuel and perpetuate hatred. This is a role the media has and continues to play with regards to the conflict over Nagorno Karabakh.
Report on media in Armenia and Azerbaijan,
Caucasus Resource Research Centers
Attitudes in Armenia
Attitudes in Azerbaijan
Attitudes in Georgia
Another alternative?
Throughout history, war has affected media, with conflict often creating an information void. In the 21st century, media has begun to affect war more than ever before. Digital media technologies [...] have increased communication and information dissemination in conflict settings [...]. These new tools can be used to foment violence or to foster peace, and it is possible to build communication systems that encourage dialogue and nonviolent political solutions.
Ivan Sigal, Global Voices Executive Director, Digital media in conflict-prone societies, Center for International Media Assistance (CIMA)
Twitter communication
http://www.oneworld.am/diversity/
Offline/Online cooperation
Words of caution
New media tools will certainly help in getting people better acquainted with each other, but at the same time can also be used to reaffirm existing biases. Just search on the Internet for Armenian and Azerbaijani web sites and you can find a lot of trash and very harmful discourse from nationalist websites. Im mildly optimistic, but at the same time think we should be very cautious about what we find on the Internet as well.
Bart Woord, International Federation of Liberal Youth (IFLRY) Secretary General
http://peace.facebook.com
Holistic approach
I think you cant do it just with social media tools, but as weve
seen over the past 15 years, you definitely cant do it by meeting
in Tbilisi for a weekend every summer. It becomes an entertainment
and Ive had experience with those conferences in Georgia where its
just one big coffee break and a waste of money. However, I think
that both approaches combined could propel things along.
Micael Bogar, Projects Manager at the American University's Center
for Social Media
Shameless plugs
Global Voices Online
http://www.globalvoicesonline.orgGlobal Voices Caucasus Conflict
Voices
http://globalvoicesonline.org/specialcoverage/caucasus-conflict-voices/Global
Voices Advocacy
http://advocacy.globalvoicesonline.org/Rising Voices
http://rising.globalvoicesonline.org/
Overcoming Negative Stereotypes in the South Caucasus
http://www.oneworld.am/diversity/