Thank you from Assetmap.org/Uganda
April 2, 2008 at 10:33 pm | In Uncategorized | Leave a CommentTags: assetmap.org/uganda, change.org, dgw, mashup, netsquared, Uganda, web2.0
From the Assetmap.org/Uganda team,
Thanks EVERYONE who supported the Assetmap.org/Uganda project. It was inspiring for us to see the number of people who were excited about tools that would let them support community-led development efforts in this remarkable region. With your support, we were among the top 20 vote getters and will head to California to compete for $100,000 in grants and prizes this may.
While experienced practitioners have long-known that the most impacting, sustainable development efforts are those led by local communities, its only been in the last few years that average citizens around the world have begun to have the resources they need to support these efforts. We believe with your support, Assetmap.org/Uganda can provide a vital toolset to support post-conflict rebuilding in Uganda.
But we need your help! This tool is about collaboration and average citizens supporting development around the world. What information do you need to make decisions about collaborations, volunteering, or philanthropic giving? What type of data factors into how you support development efforts around the world. We have our instincts and some research, but we want to hear from YOU.
If you’re interested in any of these issues, please take a few minutes to fill out this survey:
http://www.formassembly.com/forms/50620
Thanks again, and please email us at assetmapuganda@gmail.com for more information or to get involved.
Best wishes,
Nathaniel Whittemore and Assetmap.org/Uganda team
Help build peace in Uganda in just five minutes
March 17, 2008 at 6:00 pm | In Uncategorized | Leave a CommentTags: community development, competition, conflict, human rights, invisible children, mashup, netsquared, philanthropy, Uganda, web2.0
HELP PEACE BUILDING EFFORTS IN NORTHERN UGANDA IN JUST FIVE MINUTES.
http://web.mac.com/nlwhittemore/Site/about.html
Northern Uganda is an incredible place. The efforts of community based organizations in a region that has suffered more than 20 years of civil war serve as an inspiration for all of us who seek peace and justice for a better world. Today, the country is on the verge of peace but faces a new challenge: who will support the incredible efforts of community-led organizations when the big NGOs move on to the next crisis?
Concerned global citizens! Help the Center for Global Engagement at Northwestern University launch an exciting new project that will use digital mapping tools to better coordinate American support and philanthropy for civil society in northern Uganda. The project is called assetmap.org/uganda and has the goal of aggregating information about where projects happen, what they focus on, and who’s involved so that all of us concerned with supporting community-led efforts to rebuild northern Ugandan civil society can better share best practices, direct support, and collaborate for greater impact. To read more, click here.
To help go here:
http://www.netsquared.org/user/register
Then you can go here to vote:
http://www.netsquared.org/2008/conference/projects/assetmap-org-uganda
American citizens (and indeed, people from around the world) have a unique opportunity to support norther Ugandan civil society’s transition from war to peace. Amazing organizations and projects led by average people have begun to do just that. But to fully realize our opportunity, we need collaboration. For collaboration, we need shared information. Providing that information is what assetmap.org/uganda is all about.
We’ve posted a project submission online in the Netsquared Mashable competition, and I’m asking you to register for Netsquared and vote for us. If our project, assetmap.org/uganda, is in the top 20 in terms of user voting, we’ll be invited to the national conference in May, where a panel will award more than $100,000 in prizes.
Netsquared is an initiative designed to help people use digital tools to further social change goals. I believe our project has a unique potential to improve coordination and collaboration among the sizeable expat community who run or support community development and human rights projects in northern Uganda. We hope to facilitate this collaboration by designing a tool that:
* maps project locations so you know who’s working where
* tags information about the specific issues projects and organizations seek to address
* links tagged and mapped projects to the facebook and LinkedIn profiles of participating donors or volunteers
This could be the basis for volunteer collaborations, best practice sharing, grant award competitions, and much much more, but to aggregate our impact, we need to aggregate our data.
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