FC: How anti-Iraq war protesters employed technology, from NYT

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Sat Feb 22 2003 - 19:16:34 PST

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    Some photos from last month's protests:
    http://www.mccullagh.org/theme/anti-iraq-war-march-jan03.html
    
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    Date: Sat, 22 Feb 2003 18:58:29 -0800 (PST)
    From: "Jennifer 8. Lee" <[spamproofed]@nytimes.com>
    To: Declan McCullagh <declanat_private>
    
    http://www.nytimes.com/2003/02/23/weekinreview/23JLEE.html
    
    CRITICAL MASS
    How Protesters Mobilized So Many and So Nimbly
    By JENNIFER 8. LEE
    
    
    WASHINGTON — Before the global protests against war in Iraq last weekend,
    organizers were already making conference calls and passing out fliers for
    their next set of demonstrations, including one scheduled for next Saturday,
    outside the White House.
    
    But then, the worldwide protests drew millions of people onto the streets,
    from San Francisco to London, and the Bush administration hit some diplomatic
    roadblocks. Sensing delay in White House momentum, the organizers themselves
    paused and decided to make a strategic move, delaying the demonstrations from
    March 1 until March 15. They spread the news the old-fashioned way, through
    alternative radio stations and word of mouth, and the instantaneous way,
    through Web sites and e-mail messages.
    
    Organizing a protest is fundamentally about logistics: where do people meet,
    how do they get on a bus, who will order portable toilets. Obviously, the
    Internet, like fax machines and copiers, has made the tasks easier. Before
    last weekend's protests, for example, people registered online for buses to
    New York. And a mass e-mail notice was sent out to New York protesters,
    informing them about public bathrooms in Midtown Manhattan and giving them a
    number to call in case of arrest.
    
    But the Internet has become more than a mere organizing tool; it has changed
    protests in a more fundamental way, by allowing mobilization to emerge from
    free-wheeling amorphous groups, rather than top-down hierarchical ones.
    
    In the 60's, the anti-Vietnam War movement grew gradually. "It took four and
    a half years to multiply the size of the Vietnam protests twentyfold," said
    Todd Gitlin, a sociology professor at Columbia University and longtime
    liberal activist.
    
    The first nationwide antiwar march in 1965 attracted about 25,000 people. By
    1969, the protests had grown to half a million. But increasing the numbers
    required weeks and months of planning, using snail mail, phone calls and
    fliers.
    
    "This time the same thing has happened in six months," Mr. Gitlin said. Even
    though momentum behind the demonstrations didn't grow until a month ago,
    after Secretary of State Colin L. Powell's presentation to the United
    Nations, more than 800,000 people turned out in 150 rallies in the United
    States last weekend, from 100 in Davenport, Iowa, to an estimated 350,000 in
    New York City. In Europe, more than 1.5 million protested.
    
    The protests had no single identified leader and no central headquarters.
    Social theorists have a name for these types of decentralized networks:
    heterarchies. In contrast to hierarchies, with top-down structures,
    heterarchies are made up of previously isolated groups that can connect to
    one another and coordinate.
    
    Because no central decision-making authority exists, protests can be
    localized and can appeal to new groups and individuals who don't live in
    areas where social protest information would typically reach. For example,
    Mothers Acting Up was started two years ago by four women around a kitchen
    table in Boulder, Colo., a liberal college town. But with their Internet
    site, www.mothersactingup.org, they have been able to reach 600 like-minded
    members across the country, many of whom participated in marches last week.
    
    Technology also spreads word of rallies to countries where free expression is
    limited. In Singapore, where the government does not allow demonstrations at
    the American Embassy, cellphone text messages went out, exhorting recipients
    to gather at the embassy anyway. The text messages, which work like mass
    e-mail messaging to mobile devices, attracted at least a half-dozen
    placard-carrying demonstrators at the gates at the appointed time. The police
    rounded them up for questioning.
    
    "Whenever a new communications technology lowers the threshold for groups to
    act collectively, new kinds of institutions emerge," said Howard Rheingold,
    the author of "Smart Mobs: The Next Social Revolution," which documents
    self-organizing and leaderless movements. "We are seeing the combination of
    network communications and social networks."
    
    His book tells the story of how cellphone text messaging helped bring down
    Joseph Estrada, the Philippine president who was ousted after protests in
    2001 over corruption. Text messaging advertised instant rallies, encouraged
    people to protest by wearing black and provided updates on the impeachment
    trial.
    
    (In the same way, cellphone messaging is potentially alarming for the Chinese
    government. Officials do not have centralized control over the network and
    therefore cannot censor it, the way they do the Internet.)
    
    E-mail lists have allowed individuals to create groups that defy geography
    and time. Thousands of people have joined hundreds of antiwar lists, and
    diverse streams of messages fly back and forth quickly, vastly different from
    the information flow in hierarchies. Since the beginning of the year, 300
    messages have been posted on a popular antiwar list in Sydney, Australia,
    that has almost 900 members. The notes range from solicitations for donations
    to United Nations updates to appeals for local volunteers.
    
    This is mass mobilization, but also nimble mobilization. Protesting a war
    that hasn't begun requires a constant eye on the calendar of government
    action. And the movement's flexibility maximizes its impact, organizers say.
    A protest date can easily be moved, timed to affect the latest diplomatic
    maneuver.
    
    "We are trying to stay a step ahead of the administration by our planning,"
    said Damu Smith, chairman of Black Voices for Peace, one of hundreds of
    groups involved in last week's demonstrations. And staying ahead of the game
    "is absolutely strategically central in our ability to be effective in what
    we are doing."
    
    Military theorists are fond of saying that future warfare will revolve around
    social and communication networks. Antiwar groups have found that this is
    true for their work as well.
    
    
    
    
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