BarCamps Without Borders: Bringing Bloggers Together to Make Change
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Originally published on Idea Lab. OK, So you’ve got your own blog. You’ve started taking pictures and posting them online. But what’s more, you’ve also trained some of your friends, family, and neighbors how to publish online. And, via the blogosphere, you’ve been able to get to know others in your city who you otherwise never would have met. Great! It gets even better. Through this new online community and conversation you have discovered that many of your daily concerns are also the concerns of your neighbors and friends. You want better public transportation. So do they. You think it would be cool to organize a weekly independent movie night. So do they. You think your community needs more venues for young musicians. So do … ok, so you get the idea. Great ideas are often the easiest part. But … then what? Well, if you have an extra $5,000 in your pocket you could go to a conference like TED or Pop!Tech. Or, if you’re deemed important enough you might even get invited to the most exclusive gathering of them all, the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. There you will meet all the important politicians and business leaders who can help turn your brilliant ideas into sustainable social change. But then, what about for those of us who don’t have an extra $5,000 in our pockets? Where do we go? Enter BarCamps. The first BarCamp, held in Palo Alto in late 2005, was organized in friendly retaliation against Foo Camp, an exclusive by-invitation-only gathering of Silicon Valley movers and shakers who are one way or another connected to Web 2.0 superstar Tim O’Reilly. According to Tantek Çelik, the first BarCamp was organized in less than one week. Its organizers had no idea that it would spread across the United States, much less become an international phenomenon. But these days you hear more about barcamps in Mumbai, Buenos Aires, and Bangkok than traditional cybercities like Seattle and Austin. One of the defining characteristics of barcamps is their “unconference format“, which allows attendees to shape the agenda and discussion topics. There are few rules and they perhaps can all be summed up by the popular slogan “no spectators, only participants.” Bringing the ‘unconference’ movement to the developing world are bridge-bloggers like Evgeny Morozov, a Belarussian Web 2.0 enthusiast now living in Berlin who plays a pivotal role in describing the nuances of the former Soviet Union world to a mostly Western audience. In October 2007 Morozov teamed up with Ukrainian bloggers to host the region’s first barcamp in Ukraine’s capital, Kyiv. That then gave birth to last week’s BarCamp Baltics, held in Riga, Latvia. As Morozov describes the gathering:
Given BarCamp’s tech-centric beginnings, most gatherings still focus on open source technologies, but increasingly the discussions are about how open source software can be used to affect social change. For example, from Mike Stopforth’s summary of BarCamp Johannesburg, we learn of SchoolNet Namibia, which partners with Namibian schools to help support them with open source software solutions, wireless internet access, Creative Commons-licensed educational content, and even solar-powered school computer laboratories. Kenyan blogger Wilfred Mworia tells us that November 2007′s BarCamp in Nairobi focused largely on encouraging innovation in Kenya’s tech sector. Evgeny Morozov and the organizers of BarCamp Baltics took the encouragement of social innovation one step further by organizing an “Innovation Incubator” session in which attendees applied for micro-grants to help get their projects off the ground:
Despite all these powerful examples and important discussions, it should be noted that the unconference format isn’t without its pitfalls. Neha Viswanathan, who attended BlogCamp 2006 in Chennai, notes that there is a big difference between an unconference and a disorganized conference. In fact, organizing a successful BarCamp requires at least as much work as organizing a traditional conference with big-name speakers. Morozov also blogged extensively about his lessons learned during BarCamp Kyiv and BarCamp Baltics. If you would like to organize a BarCamp in your city, there is no better starting place than Crystal Williams’ “Ten Steps to Organizing a Barcamp.” (With German, Portuguese, and French versions available.) Barcamp.org, of course, also has a valuable list of resources. |









Hi Oso,
Thanks for that summary.
Now that’s a well made article
It’s very important to know that you don’t need big money or 200 attendees to start a BarCamp. The first BarCamp we held in Alsace (Eastern-France) gathered only 25 people and costed almost nothing.
So the best way to start is to :
- choose a date
- create the page on the wiki
- talk about it to your friends
- blog about it
If U’re 4 people, the BarCamp will be held in a coffeeshop. If U’re more, the other participants will bring their own idea and their own help. I really advise you to read Crystal’s advices. It helped us a lot.
If anyone needs advices for organising a BarCamp in France, I’ll be happy to help.
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