Frederick Noronha [फ़रेदरिक नोरोनया] on Mon, 2 Feb 2009 17:46:32 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> INTERVIEW: This is an exciting time for people working with video -- Sam Gregory (Witness) |
THIS IS AN EXCITING TIME FOR PEOPLE WORKING WITH VIDEO -- SAM GREGORY Sam Gregory <sam@witness.org> is WITNESS's programme director, a video producer, trainer, human rights advocate and on the board of the Tactical Technology Collective, among others. Extracts from an interview: FN: Tell us about WITNESS? WITNESS [http://www.witness.org] is a human rights organization which uses video and related online technologies to help people use video for change. We work in a number of different ways: we partner with local human rights group on campaigns that incorporate video in many different forms (for evidence, for community organizing, for decision-maker lobbying). We train hundreds of groups each year in short-term trainings including a Video Advocacy Institute [http://www.witness.org/vai]; we maintain an archive of human rights footage, and we have an initiative called the Hub [http://hub.witness.org] This is an online platform for human rights media and action where you can share video and propose actions. We're highlighting there the use of video in the first ICC (International Criminal Court, at the Hague) trial right now. The blog on the Hub comments and points to innovative uses of video for change. FN: Would it be right to say that WITNESS is info-activism driven? How important is info-activism in the work of WITNESS? WITNESS is definitely a user of info-activism. We specialize in thinking about how the unique properties of video, testimony and visual story-telling work in our contemporary information climate. Both in advocacy and activism settings off-line as well as in online contexts; what we call 'video advocacy'. So, the Tactical Tech conception of info-activism is at the heart of what we do. FN: What's your task as program director? As Program Director I manage a team here of regional coordinators. Each of these coordinators works within a geographic region to support human rights groups and concerned citizens to use video for change. They do so by way of focused intensive campaign partnerships, in short-term trainings and via online platforms like the Hub. I get to play a key role in also developing our strategies for training, and for integrating online and off-line advocacy. FN: Is video more important to you compared to human-rights activism, or vice versa? What started first in your life, or did both come together? Why did you see video as a useful option? Both video and activism co-existed in my life. For a period of time I was making film and also involved in activism, and I was frustrated at how the two didn't fit together. In the traditional TV documentary world, the advocacy purpose of film was under-utilized. The fact that you got 500,000 viewers for a TV broadcast told you nothing about whether that turned into action. So I started looking for ways to really make the video fit as a tool for real advocacy and change-making, and came upon WITNESS. I love the story-telling side of video-making. Its ability to convey human experience across borders in a way that a written report (for example, a common format in human rights work) cannot. But what really makes it powerful for me is seeing it being used to express the agency of the people most affected by violations, and secure real change. FN: At a personal level, are you in touch with other documentary film-makers in diverse parts of the globe? What are the useful networks through which one can find such individuals? I have a lot of contact with documentary film-makers around the world. Our primary focus has tended to be on helping human rights groups and concerned citizens use video themselves as a tool, rather than necessarily helping documentary makers make more films about human rights. But we are always trying to build collaborations with peers in our field at local and regional levels. I'm a big admirer of networks like 'Shooting People' [https://shootingpeople.org/], DFG [http://www.dfgdocs.com/], and regional groups like Pusat Komas [http://www.komas.org/] in Malaysia, Video Volunteers [http://www.videovolunteers.org/] and Drishti [http://www.drishtimedia.org/] in India. Then, there's also BritDoc [http://britdoc.org] and groups in the US like Bay Area Video Coalition [http://www.bavc.org/], and Working Films [http://www.workingfilms.org]. I also have been following some new tools that use web 2.0 ideas to link together filmmakers and NGOs, since I think this is really useful. We're also hoping that the next step of evolution of the Hub will be to include a facet that is about peer-to-peer learning and sharing in the action-oriented social justice media community. And I'm very glad to hear about Docuwallahs2! [http://groups.yahoo.com/group/docuwallahs2] FN: Tell us a little about Video for Change? Is it still available? Any changes of new edition? 'Video for Change' is still available. It came out in 2005. It's available to purchase in online book stores etc, but it can also be downloaded for free at the WITNESS website at http://www.witness.org/videoforchange There are also translations there into Spanish, French, Russian and Arabic. Shortly we'll have an online translation into Burmese, and there are published editions also in Bahasa Indonesian and Turkish. If anyone is interested in doing a translation into another language, we'd be glad to hear from them! We've been thinking about doing a new edition that might be compiled more on a wiki-like basis to find the best case studies, and examples. And we've been doing some slightly different curriculum development of late -- developing short five-minute animation guides to video advocacy, our 'Guide to Video Advocacy, which is on the Hub at http://hub.witness.org/en/action/vastt FN: Why is video curriculum-building different in the field you work? Where does the emphasis go? Our approach to curriculum-building is not so different from other fields. We're very focused on adult learning -- on making sure we build and draw on the experiences of people in the workshops, aim for immediately relevant knowledge and skills, and cater to a range of potential users of video and online technologies (different advocacy settings, different access to technologies, different communities worked with). In our Video Advocacy Institute curriculum, we really try to focus on giving participants the right mix of strategies (drawing heavily on case studies of success), technical skills to be effective producers, and making sure that skills are immediately applied to a specific project. So, a key part of the process is developing a Video Action Plan for how video will be part of an ongoing or upcoming campaign. FN: Is video getting the role it deserves in our media-over-saturated world? It's an immensely exciting time for people working with video. More and more people creating and using video, more places to share it, more ways to place it in front of people who can make a difference. It raises challenges too: saturation of images and compassion-fatigue, finding your place to be heard, and the safety and security and consent issues that arise when many more people are filming each other. But overall I think we're seeing a really powerful moment for individual expression but also collective accountability being supported via image-making. FN: Lastly, please describe yourself in 30 words. A Brit living in New York for the last eight years -- happily married but waiting for it to be legal. Deeply involved with using video for change, film, Burma and medieval history. MORE INFO-ACTIVISM BLOG posts at http://www.informationactivism.org/blog -- FN * http://fredericknoronha.wordpress.com M: +91-9822122436 P: +91-832-2409490 # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org