by David Sasaki | Jan 2, 2014
In 2010 and 2011 I maintained the bilingual blog Información Cívica to document my full time consultancy for Open Society Foundations. I was aided by my co-author, Juan Arellano. Through case studies and interviews, the blog sought to document and evaluate the use of technology and information by Latin American civil society, and help narrow the divide between the influential “digerati” and more experienced public advocacy groups.
by David Sasaki | Jan 2, 2014
In 2010 I directed a team of 16 researchers to complete a global mapping of technology projects that aim to promote transparency, political accountability and civic participation. The six-month mapping culminated in a widely referenced final report and lead to a second phase of research that focuses on in-depth, longer term impact evaluation.
by David Sasaki | Jan 2, 2014
In 2009 I traveled to Lebanon, Beirut with Eduardo Avila to cover the first Arab Bloggers Summit. One year later and the majority of participants would become influential actors in the lead-up to the 2011 “Arab Spring.” While in Lebanon, I also penned this...
by David Sasaki | Jan 2, 2014
In 2009, Bektour Iskender and I facilitated a workshop in Istanbul, Turkey to teach digital storytelling to Eurasian journalists and affiliates of Internews. Prior to the workshop, I published a short video interview with Bektour, Kyrgyzstan’s most influential blogger, and another video on Istanbul street food.
by David Sasaki | Jan 2, 2014
In 2009 I co-curated 80plus1 with the media artist Michael Naimark. Based on Jules Vernes’ famous novel Around the World in 80 Days, the 81-day exhibit sought to bring the world to the residents of Linz, Austria and to bring a bit of Linz to the rest of the...
by David Sasaki | Jan 2, 2014
In 2008 I was invite to the Rockefeller Foundation’s Bellagio Center to cover the four-week event “Making the eHealth Connection,” which brought together researchers, policy makers, and philanthropists to discuss the potential of technology to make healthcare more affordable, effective, and accessible.
by David Sasaki | Dec 30, 2013
From 2006 to 2010 I contributed to the PBS blog Idea Lab, which examines the social implications of the digital transition in news and journalism. An archive of my posts is still online.
by David Sasaki | Dec 30, 2013
Since its founding as a recipient of a 2007 Knight News Challenge grant, I directed Rising Voices, a citizen media training initiative of Global Voices, to train over 25 under-represented communities around the world to take advantage of new media tools to effect social change. I authored the Introduction to Global Citizen Media, which has been translated into six languages, and edited Blogging Positively, a guide to citizen media related to HIV/AIDS.
by David Sasaki | Dec 30, 2013
From 2005 to 2007 I was Global Voices’ editor for Latin America. I recruited, trained, and edited a team of fifteen contributing authors who curate the most interesting online conversations from blogging communities throughout Latin America. I also oversaw the launch of the Spanish-language version of Global Voices. Today Silvia Viñas is the Latin America editor and Juan Arellano manages the Spanish-language site.
by David Sasaki | Dec 30, 2013
In 2005 I lived in Monterrey, Mexico and contributed to MTYBlogs, a community of “Regio” bloggers that was founded by Seyd and maintained by Candy Belen, Rolando Garza, Alan Flores, and Moises Kirsch. Though MTYBlogs no longer exists, to this day Alán Flores maintains MTYBlog.