Posts Tagged ‘Yahoo! Academic Fellowships’

Yahoo! Georgetown Fellow, Evgeny Morozov, leads panel on Digital Power and Its Discontents

By Ebele Okobi-Harris | Director, Yahoo! BHRP

Georgetown’s Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, co-sponsored by Yahoo!’s Georgetown Fellowship, will host a  conference  on April 21st, from 10.30 until 4.30. The one-day conference will be hosted by Yahoo Georgetown Fellow, Evgeny Morozov.

The day will feature thought-provoking discussions about the ways that digital technologies can disrupt the balance of power between and among states, their citizens and the private sector. Speakers will include Ambassador Philip Verveer, John Morris of CDT, and Rebecca MacKinnon.

For more information and to RSVP, please go here.

Yahoo! Fellow Evgeny Morozov On Authoritarian Governments and the Internet

By Ebele Okobi-Harris | Director, Yahoo! BHRP

Evgeny Morozov

Take a look at video of this fascinating panel discussion about authoritarian regimes and technology. Our Yahoo! Georgetown Fellow for 2010, Evgeny Morozov, is one of the panelists. He is joined by Rebecca MacKinnon, who is a journalist, blogger and scholar as well as a member of the GNI.  The other panelists are Alec Ross, of the Office of the Secretary of State, and Tim Wu of Slate Magazine and Columbia Law School, and the panel is moderated by James Fallows of Atlantic Monthly.

http://newamerica.net/events/2010/authority_meet_technology

Yahoo! Georgetown Fellow Event, November 17

By Ebele Okobi-Harris | Director, Yahoo! BHRP

Evgeny MorozovEvgeny Morozov, Yahoo!’s 2010 Georgetown Fellow, will be speaking at a seminar (co-sponsored by Yahoo!) on the Internet, free expression and authoritarian regimes. If you will be in the DC area on the 17th, please see below for more details and to RSVP.

Georgetown University’s Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Diplomacy

and the Mortara Center invite you to

THE INTERNET, FREE EXPRESSION AND AUTHORITARIANISM

Please join us to discuss the evolving nature of authoritarianism in the age of social media and digital communications. Our speakers will assess the impact of new communication technology on regime stability, free expression and civic engagement, and discuss the changing political environments in Russia, China, and Iran.

2:00 to 5:00 p.m.

Tuesday, November 17th 2009

Mortara Center

3601 N. St. NW

Washington, DC

Click here to RSVP

Session I:         2:00 PM – 3:00 PM

Evgeny Morozov

Yahoo! Fellow at Georgetown University

Coffee Break

Session II:        3:30 – 5:00 PM

Andrew Carvin

Senior Strategist, Social Media Desk, National Public Radio

Arvind Ganesan

Director of Business and Human Rights, Human Rights Watch

Shanthi Kalathil

Co-author, Open Networks, Closed Regimes: The Impact of the Internet on

Authoritarian Rule

Marc Lynch

Professor, The George Washington University

This program is sponsored by the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy and the Mortara Center for International Studies at Georgetown University, with the generous support of the Schott Foundation and Yahoo!

Introducing Evgeny Morozov, Our Newest Yahoo! Fellow at Georgetown

By Ebele Okobi-Harris | Director, Yahoo! BHRP

Evgeny Morozov

I’m thrilled to introduce Evgeny Morozov, our 2009-2010 Yahoo! Fellow at Georgetown University.

Evgeny is a contributing editor to Foreign Policy and runs the magazine’s influential and widely-quoted “Net Effect” blog about the Internet’s impact on global politics.  Prior to his Yahoo! Fellowship, he was a fellow at George Soros’s Open Society Institute, where he remains on the board of the Information Program (one of the leading and most experimental funders for technology projects that have an impact on open society and human rights). Before moving to the US, Evgeny was based in Berlin and Prague, where he was Director of New Media at Transitions Online, a media development NGO active in 29 countries of the former Soviet bloc. Evgeny’s work has appeared in The Economist, Newsweek, The Washington Post, The International Herald Tribune, The Boston Globe, Slate, Le Monde, The San Francisco Chronicle, Boston Review, Foreign Policy, Project Syndicate, Dissent and many other publications. He has appeared on CNN, CBS, SkyNews, CBC, Al Jazeera International, France 24, Reuters TV, NPR, BBC Radio 4 and BBC World Service.

Here is what Evgeny is working on, in his own words:

“The rapid spread of new communications technologies around the globe promised a new age of politics, where citizens would be able to educate themselves about important political issues of the day, form ad-hoc groups about the most important such issues, and use new media to strategically challenge the power of their governments. This was a very appealing narrative, because it also matched the rapid spread of freedom and democracy across the world, particularly in the 1990s.

Looking at some of these early predictions – about the end of nationalism or the demise of the nation state or the global triumph of Web-powered freedom – one easily detects the naiveté that underlined much of our thinking on these issues. As it turns out, conventional (and often brutal) politics still matters, even in the age of easy mobilization dominated by blogs and social networking.

In my own research – including my one year at Georgetown on a Yahoo fellowship – I’m focusing on how governments – especially those that are not particularly famous for their respect for democracy and human rights – have been adapting to the digital threat posed by this new era and minimizing the democratizing effects of these new technologies. Comparing the approaches in China, Russia, much of the Middle East, I came to see that the governments – and groups and networks affiliated with/ and supportive of what they do – have made a remarkable use of the very same technologies that have become favorite tools of the activists and NGOs. Similarly, many of the new public spheres that formed in digital spaces have also been receptive to numerous nationalist and extremist ideas that were not very conducive to deliberative democracy. How do we still promote activities of the “virtual civil societies” without empowering its enemies, who are sometimes even more dangerous than the authoritarian governments themselves? Were we too quick to assume that promoting democracy and freedom – as well as engaging in public diplomacy – would necessarily become easier and quicker in this new digital age?

These are some of the questions that I’m asking in my research and various events at Georgetown and that I’ll be discussing in my upcoming book about the Internet and democracy (to be published by PublicAffairs in late 2010).”

We are looking forward to bringing Evgeny to Yahoo!’s campus early next year to talk about his work. Congratulations, Evgeny!

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