Periodic Reporting for period 1 - DIGI-EMP (International experiences of digital empowerment in a climate justice frame)
Période du rapport: 2021-05-01 au 2023-04-30
This project is focused on empowerment in theory (= concept) and practice (= experience). It does, however, speak to wider issues around democracy, such as: (1) processes of democratisation: through its focus on empowering unequally engaged communities, and (2) digital divides (= the gulf between developed & developing regions in digital technology usage and skills): through its questioning of whether crowdsourcing empowers communities that are already privileged (thus empowered) in their access to digital technologies. The climate justice frame specifically addresses social and political injustices such as unequal and therefore undemocratic global involvement in climate change debates, issues that could in theory be addressed through empowering practices. Thus, while these significant global social problems did not lie within the scope of this specific project, there are clear links to these wider issues, and the project results were therefore applied in a way that they would speak to these debates, for example through discussions of digital empowerment theory in relation to digital-visual misogyny in climate cases and Global North-South relationships in research. This project addresses these issues by exploring whether and (if so) how individuals affected by climate change experience and perceive empowerment through efforts to “gain control” (socially, politically, or otherwise) of their own living conditions by engaging in digital crowdsourcing activities offered by INGO in the Global North with a climate change priority. To do so, this project drew on qualitative research with case study organisations WWF and Greenpeace.
In combination, these findings showed the intricate ways in which digital media, climate justice, and aspects of region are intertwined. Beyond the findings already accumulated here, it is expected that future outputs from these results will further highlight the complex ways in which regions matter in these Global North-to-South opportunities, as well as the ways in which these collaborations mould digital political power dynamics.