Since I got to Harvard I've been casting myself in all digital directions: research assistant at the Berkman Center, trying to start a student Digital Action Group (DigAct), maybe building some digital activism technology with Gene Koo, bringing a speaker to campus. I've got a big goal and I'm not sure how to accomplish it so I just keep grabbing hold of things, hoping that something will stick.
So what is this big goal? I want digital activism to be a global practice and a global language. I want people around the world to be able to use digital tools to create campaigns around the issues that matter to them. I want there to be a shared vocabulary of digital activism so activists around the world can talk about their campaigns and be mutually intelligible. I want there to be some theory behind digital activism so it isn't just reduced to tactics (create a campaign blog! write a mass e-mail!)
I'm not sure how to do this (and I'm sure there is more than one way), but I still feel blindfolded and trying to hit a piñata sometimes (yes, you've interpreted the metaphor correctly, digital activism is the piñata). How do try to study and promote something when you don't know what it is but you're pretty sure it could change the world?


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In 2006, I founded ZapBoom Consulting, which specializes in the analysis of how digital
tools like cell phones and the Internet can be used in social change campaigns in developing countries. I have
researched and written reports on topics ranging from 



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