Building the NII From The Bottom Up: A Strategy For Working Through Local Organizations


Date: Sat, 27 Aug 1994 16:35:26 -070
>From: Phil Agre 
Subject: Building the NII from the Bottom Up

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                T H E  N E T W O R K  O B S E R V E R

  VOLUME 1, NUMBER 8                                   AUGUST 1994  

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  Building the NII From The Bottom Up:
  A Strategy For Working Through Local Organizations.
  Steven E. Mille
  CPSR National Board
  smiller@mecn.mass.ed
  By definition, an infrastructure is something that lays th
  foundation for something else.  The coming National Informatio
  Infrastructure (NII) will lay the foundation for -- and thereby
  help shape -- new forms of production, consumption, culture,
  social interaction, and citizenship.  The kind of future the NII
  helps shape depends, in part, on the visions it is intended t
  achieve and the strategies used to implement those goals.
  Industry spokespeople describe the NII as a vehicle for movies
  on demand, home shopping, and sit-com reruns, with the "serious"
  content provided by endless infomercials.  Clinton Administration
  liberals stress the NII's educational importance of allowing
  access to endless information, as well as its potential to spur
  private sector economic development.  Many cybernauts are most
  enthused about the creation of virtual communities and the coming
  together of the global village.

  But for those of us whose pleasure in the technology is matched
  by a growing concern about the tendency of the NII to furthe
  divide our society (and the world) into "haves" and "have
  nots," these visions -- and the NII implementation strategies
  they imply -- are woefully inadequate.  To those of us who see
  the NII as a critical tool for the revitalization of democracy,
  the strengthening of neighborhoods, the release of grass-roots
  cultural creativity, and the revival of mutual aid, these visions
  are a painful warning of opportunities we hope are not yet lost.

  These visions fail because they won't lead to the achievement of
  universal service in a meaningful way.  While an estimated third
  of American homes have a computer, only about 3% are regularly
  online.  In fact, as a result of price increases caused by
  deregulation, a growing number of Americans -- up to 20% of some
  low-income communities -- don't even have home telephones.  Even
  if the "NII access device" of the future is built into TV sets,
  cable set-top boxes, video game controllers, or other "everyday"
  devices, and even if they eventually drop in price, it will be
  a long time before the entire population will be able to affor
  them -- if ever.  In addition, no matter how friendly computers
  get, they will still require some level of skill and expertise.
  In a nation which has a 40% high school drop out rate, a 20
  adult illiteracy rate, a permanently unemployed underclass, and
  a segmented labor market that tracks a significant proportion of
  the working population into dead-end, unskilled, and short-term
  jobs -- it is likely that many people will never get taught the
  skills needed to do more than the most basic types of (probably
  consumption oriented) activities.  Social transformation requires
  social participation, and a totally market-driven NII is not
  likely to achieve it.

  Second, these visions fail because they are too focused on
  individuals.  For all the importance of individual responsibilit
  and effort, societal power (political, economic, and cultural)
  overwhelmingly operates through institutions.  Individual
  empowerment can lead to upward mobility.  But the "trickling up"
  of particular people doesn't change the structural hierarchies
  and inequalities of our society.  Social justice, the provisio
  of the basic necessities of life for everyone, the inclusion o
  all groups in a democratic governing process -- all these require
  the poor and powerless to aggregate their individual efforts into
  organizations and collective campaigns
  AN ORGANIZATIONAL STRATEGY

  These criticisms of the most common visions of NII implementation
  imply another approach: combining NII deployment with local
  organizational development.  And not just any organizations,
  but specifically those that serve, advocate for, and are run
  by people from the parts of our society that are least likely
  to be able to buy their way into a market-driven NII tha
  rations access according to personal income.  In this context,
  people who are creating civic networks as a way of anchoring NII
  development in the needs and realities of local communities must
  go beyond making their facilities available to large numbers of
  individuals, even if those individuals are low-income, non-white,
  non-English speaking, or any of the other politically correct
  categories.  We need to adopt a strategy of working through and
  with grassroots organizations.

  An organizational strategy has many advantages.  Organization
  usually have greater financial resources than individuals,
  particularly low-income people.  Non-profit organizations are
  much more capable than individuals of soliciting donations
  or applying for grants to pay for a couple of computers and
  modems.  In fact, most Internet users already get supplied with
  equipment and access through organizations -- universities and
  corporations.  To include other populations, we need to work
  through the organizations that impact their lives.

  But simply having the equipment is not enough.  Few of us
  learned all we know by ourselves.  When we go to a library, we
  start by asking the librarian for help.  In terms of computers
  most of us learned from others at our schools or workplaces.  We
  all need intermediaries to get us started and support us throug
  the inevitable problems of learning to enter and wander through
  cyberspace.  Local organizations can provide the vital connection
  between ordinary people and the on-line universe
  Organizations are multipliers.  Training individuals helps
  individuals.  Training people in an organization means that
  the skills are likely to be passed on to others, and that
  the community will retain an institutional capability even as
  individuals pass in and out of activity
  Working through local organizations also makes it easier to
  connect to people.  Instead of trying to convince people to come
  to the network, the network goes to where the people are alread
  being gathered together to serve their own needs.  These are the
  groups that are already fighting to empower their members, i
  will be no small accomplishment if we can help them finds ways to
  use telecommunications to increase their chances of success.  The
  strengthening and success of local citizen's groups, self-help
  neighborhood associations, locally run service agencies, and
  other community-based organizations is crucial to any larger
  strategy for increased equality and justice in our world, of
  which preventing the creation of "information haves and hav
  nots" is just one aspect.

  Rooting cyberspace in the social realities of neighborhood
  organizations increases the odds that the needs and priorities
  of those "have not" areas will be effectively aggregated and
  expressed.  If we want to impact NII policy, we have to build
  a grassroots base as well as advocate at the federal level.
  Washington-based public interest advocacy is vitally important
  But it is only one part of the picture.  Local understanding of
  the issues based on concrete efforts to use telecommunications
  for community improvement is just as important, perhaps in some
  ways even more important.  This is another way that organizations
  multiply individual impact.

  TECHNOLOGY HELPS ORGANIZATIONS
  People support or join groups because membership brings some
  amount of personal benefits such as learning new skills, access
  to resources, exposure to a broader world, getting useful
  services, etc.; because the group provides a way to be connecte
  with other people who share similar interests; and because they
  see the group as an effective vehicle for dealing with personal
  or societal problems.

  Technology can help organizations attract and keep loyal
  members, a vital ingredient for success.  The value of membership
  increases if organizations are the vehicle for computer skills
  training and for access to the world of on-line resources. 
  At the same time, local organizations will be better than some
  central group at recruiting network users from a broad range of
  the population.

  Technology also makes groups more effective.  Internally, groups
  can use word processing to create funding proposals, write
  reports and petitions about important issues, create membership
  letters and other materials, prepare newsletters and flyers,
  and more.  Databases are vital for keeping membership lists and
  addresses, tracking contributions, client tracking, etc.  And
  financial software for bookkeeping and fund accounting helps with
  one of the biggest headaches in the non-profit world.

  Externally, telecomputing allows organizations to gather data
  on funding opportunities, on issues they address, and on the
  population they serve.  It allows them to more easily communicate
  with their peers in other organizations to share experiences
  and build coalitions.  It allows them to gain greater exposure
  and establish increased credibility by participating in national
  forums and acting as "issue experts" for community networks. 
  In this sense, local groups act as "information providers"
  rather than as information consumers -- exactly the kind of
  bottom-up activism that will be needed if the NII is more than
  an overwhelming and hegemonic waterfall of top-down data flow.
  Networks augment the ability of those who already know about
  and talk with each other offline to share large amounts o
  information over greater distances with less concern about "real
  time" coordination.  Broad based local and national networks
  help bring together those who share similar interests, or could
  simply be helpful to each other, but whose paths do not otherwise
  cross.  In this way, people and groups can join with others who
  are "like us."

  IMPLICATIONS FOR COMMUNITY NETWORKS
  An organizational strategy has important implications for
  creating community networks.  While most local network organizers
  are already doing some of these activities, the absence of an
  explicit strategy has forced many of them to discover these ideas
  on their own and hindered fully effective sharing of experience.

  First, it implies that the first step in creating a local network
  is talking to local neighborhood leaders and building a coalition
  of local community groups.  These groups should be treated as
  full partners in the design process rather than as clients to be
  served.
  Since few of these groups will have enormous resources or
  technical expertise, this process also requires a deep commitmen
  to some type of participatory design approach.  A successful
  PD effort needs a combination of talking about general needs
  and opportunities to use and comment upon functional models. 
  Here, in fact, is where the technically knowledgeable people in
  the group play a key role, iteratively creating prototypes and
  then incorporating insights from group critiques.  In this way
  technically sophisticated people can help non-techies understan
  the general possibilities of available technology so that th
  newcomers can inject their specific needs and realities into
  the design.  Without working prototypes, group discussions can
  get lost in galactic visions beyond local capabilities.  Without
  group input, technical development can easily forget that it is
  only the vehicle for achieving other goals.

  Local groups should be seen as a primary vehicle for public
  access, equally or even more important than libraries, city hall,
  and shopping malls.  But, more importantly, network organizers
  should welcome, rather than feel unease, about the inevitable
  tendency of local groups to see the network as a vehicle for
  serving their own organizational needs.  The success of the loca
  groups is the success of the network, even though it will often
  feel as if there is a tension between the two
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  Phil Agre, editor                                pagre@ucsd.edu
  Department of Communication            
  University of California, San Diego           +1 (619) 534-6328
  La Jolla, California  92093-0503                   FAX 534-7315
  USA
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