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June 23rd, 2009 Posted in 3G Summit, Games for ChangeWhen: August 4-6th, 2010
Hosted by Open Youth Networks, a program of Columbia College’s Dept of Interactive Arts and Media in partnership with the Institute for the Study of Women and Gender in Arts and MediaDuring the 3G Summit, a diverse mix of 50 teenage girls from the greater Metropolitan area of Chicago spend three intensive days engaging in research, critical analysis and game play alongside recognized scholars/researchers in the fields of foresight, values-based game design, and gender studies. Through an inquiry based and interpretive process drawn from these disciplines, the participants generate ideas and prototype designs that harness the experiences and perspectives of girls for futuristic gender-inclusive and globally/socially-conscious gaming platforms and play environments. In particular, the girls are invited to think and write about how computer-based games designed for delivery via pda’s, mobile browsers and social networking sites could be used to educate users about local and global social issues that impact women and girls. They are also invited to consider their own roles and responsibilities in developing technologies for investigative journalism and social good with a local to global focus.
At the summit, the girls interact closely with journalists, humanities scholars and Columbia College faculty while engaging in participatory research and foresight activities. The girls also learn online journalism strategies in order to publish and disseminate their ideas through a collectively authored blog, a Facebook group and a Second Life island. The humanities scholars and girls will jointly present their future visions and 3d game prototypes at a culminating public event.
Tags: conference, gaming, gender, girls -
April 27th, 2009 Posted in FeaturesMarisol Becerra and Mindy Faber of Open Youth Networks presented OurMap of Environmental Justice along with a video about the impact of industrial pollution on residents of Little Village at the Columbia College School of Journalism’s Conference on Environmental Reporting on April 25th. Marisol explained how news outlets often position the environmental movement as one driven by young educated whites. Stories about personal responsibility to limit one’s carbon footprint trump investigative analyses about the irresponsibility of capitalist industry in creating the crisis in climate change and generating massive health effects on those working in and around those industries.
Photo by Mark Hallett
Moreover, the story about the environmental justice movement in the US — one led primarily by low income communities of color battling environmental racism, a policy of “selective victimization” — is often omitted or distorted by major news outlets. Little Village is a low income Mexican-American community that has been designated as an “ecological sacrifice zone” by both the industry and the state. Yet, the overwhelming majority of Chicago residents are completely unaware of the health and environmental crisis in the neighborhood. Faber and Becerra explained that this is why it is important that residents and youth living in those communities have access to the tools of communication and technology that allow them to become citizen journalists reporting on their own experiences.
Youth members Marisol Becerra and Zane Scheuerlein worked with Mindy Faber to produce The Cloud Factory: Putting Justice on the Map. They also trained youth members of Little Village Environmental Justice Organization how to collaboratively author a multimedia Google MyMap documenting the toxics and assets of the neighborhood through stories, videos and photos. The map also reveals how many schools are located within a one and two mile radius of the Crawford Coal Power Plant. The asthma rate in Little Village is twice as high as the national average and 40 people in the community die each year from asthma attacks while thousands more must visit emergency rooms and clinics.

Open Youth Networks along with youth partners at LVEJO and their youth membership, Young Activists Organizing as Today’s Leaders are working to expand the map and add content and data about other neighborhoods in Chicago, particularly around the South Side. Visit their blog El Cilantro to learn more. Dozens of allies - other environmental justice organizations in the US - are also included on the current map, denoted by the icon of a Lorax. If you would like to join the map as a collaborator, send an email to Mindy Faber (mfaber@colum.edu).
View OurMap of Environmental Justice in a larger map
Tags: conference, environmental_justice, googlemap, journalism








