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United States

Internet Censorship: A Comparative Study

Jonathan Eyler-Werve
Global Integrity Commons (02/19/2008)
Werve is Director of Operations for Global Integrity, an independent monitor of corruption and govenance issues, including media freedoms, access to justice and political participation. Originally educated in political theory, Werve has worked as a journalist in Southeast Asia and Europe, covering grassroots responses to globalization.
This blog post examines Article 19's media freedoms in an emerging space: the Web and peer-to-peer communications. The report provides context, via is a comparative examination of online censorship worldwide, to the unprecedented shutdown of whistle-blowing portal Wikileaks.org by a United States court order. Posted before most media outlets had covered the Wikileaks story at all, my report quickly went viral. As word of the shutdown spread, the report was passed around by technology professionals and activists alike. It was linked by dozens of blogs, drawing thousands of hits within 24 hours and contributing early momentum to a highly critical media frenzy. In less than a week, the original judge reversed his decision to muzzle Wikileaks.org following a 90-minute court proceeding.
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United States

Virtual Guantanamo

Bernhard Drax
Vanity Fair(05/01/2008)
Bernhard Drax is a Munich born and bred musician, composer and all-around radio guy in his mid 30ties, currently living in the cute little town of Pacific Grove, California.
The virtual world of Second Life offers great opportunity for activism. the virtual gitmo built in Second Life (by USC professor Peggy Weil and filmmaker Nonny dela Pena) is a great example of an immersive experience, that is unparalleled and simply cannot be re-produced in other media. Over 300 men and women are still at the US military run detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, most of them never charged of any crime...they are enemy combatants in the war on terror. January 11, 2008 marks the six-year anniversary of the arrival of prisoners at Guantánamo Bay. The author visited the virtual detention center in SL and felt how it is to be utterly hopeless!
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United States

Border Stories

Ben Fundis, Clara Long and John Drew
www.borderstories.org (08/15/2008)
Our crew travels the length of the U.S.–Mexico border, from Brownsville, Texas to Tijuana, Mexico in search of stories that portray the human face of this politically and emotionally-charged region. Our hope is that these voices will carry beyond the border towns and into the interiors of both countries to deepen the understanding of the unique challenges the region faces.
National security, immigration, and cultural change are highly emotional issues in American political discourse. So highly-charged are they that the fundamental rights of every human as laid out in the UDHR can fade to the background of public conversation. Border Stories, a web-based documentary exploring the length of the longest boundary between the developed and developing world, is an effort to promote tolerance by showcasing the humanity behind border issues. We present a mosaic of hyper-focused films from both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border that illustrate, among other rights, everyone's right to live in freedom and safety (Art 3), and to work and get a salary (Art 23). For example, in Born and Raised (http://borderstories.org/index.php/nogales-born-and-raised.html), a young man who was born in Mexico and raised in the United States grapples with being sent back to Mexico after 17 years in the U.S. In High Pointer (http://borderstories.org/index.php/campo-high-pointer.html), a member of an American anti-immigrant vigilante group explains why he thinks it's up to him to defend his country. In Mr. Nobody (http://borderstories.org/index.php/campo-high-pointer.html), a Guatemalan immigrant on the eve of an attempt to cross into the United States describes what it's like to feel invisible. These stories and a score of others in the series aim to portray the dignity and complexity of people who may not understand each other and move viewers to appreciate and value everyone's human rights.
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