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Bio

livingroom_100x113.jpgIn 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 online citizen journalism to blog advocacy and internet censorship.  I have also performed in-country Internet monitoring and international conference organizing. 

You can contact me at MaryCJoyce AT gmail DOT com.

Read full bio....

Client Buzz

Feedback from Zapboom Clients:

"Mary's passion and energy for digital activism is obvious in every action and initiative she makes."...read more

"Right away she cut to the core of our needs."...read more

"She deserves much of the credit for organizing a tremendously successful event."...read more

"She was able to turn a potentially complex technical task into something that brought all the different viewpoints together and channelled everyone's energy in a collaborative manner."...read more

Digital Activism Projects

Current CV

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Posts about "morocco" in other sites

DigiActive on the New York Times' Blog

Posted by Mary on 19/03/2008 at 19:09

I don't know if I've officially mentioned it before, but about a month ago I and a friend launched DigiActive.org, a site which aggregates the most innovative digital activism techniques from around the world.

We are really excited because our coverage of the release of Fouad Mourtada was mentioned in the New York Times‘ blog, The Lede. (According to them, we’re a “rights group”.) Click the image to read their full post on Fouad.


Fouad Mourtada is Free!

Posted by Mary on 18/03/2008 at 20:33

cross-posted from DigiActive.org

This is a huge victory for digital activism. Thank you to all the people who supported the campaign, both online and offline!

fouad_facebook_free2.jpg

CASABLANCA, March 18 - Fouad Mourtada was released from Oukacha Prison at approximately 8:00pm local time today, having received a royal pardon.

Mr. Mourtada, a 26-year old IT engineer, was taken into custody on February 5th, 2008, and was questioned regarding a fake Facebook profile of King Mohammed VI’s younger brother, Prince Moulay Rachid, which he had created on January 15. During his interrogation, Mr. Mourtada reports that he was beaten, spat on and

(Read more)

In Saudi Arabia, Fouad is Still in Prison

Posted by Mary on 10/03/2008 at 21:14

I've been blogging a lot recently about Fouad Mourtada, the young Moroccan man sentenced to three years in jail for posting a joke profile of the King's brother on Facebook.

Yet there is another Fouad - Fouad Alfarhan - who has been in jail for three months with no release imminent. Fouad, who is a politically vocal blogger, was arrested on December 10th, and an online campaign to free him started soon after.

However, when President Bush visited Saudi Arabia in mid-January, Fouad's wife asked the people taking part in the campaign to back down, fearing that the campaign

(Read more)

Help Fouad Campaign Goes Offline and International

Posted by Mary on 04/03/2008 at 15:22

If this had happened 5 years ago, who knows what would have happened. Fouad Mourtada, a young Moroccan posts a joke profile of the King's brother, Moulay Rachid, on Facebook and a few days later the profile is removed from the site. Then, two weeks later, two officials show up at his home, blinfold him, and take him to a secret location where he is interrogated, beaten, and spat upon.

Two weeks after his arrest, on February 22, Fouad was sentenced to 3 years in prison and a fine of over $1000 for "identity fraud of an electronic document."

(Read more)

Take a photo for the Help Fouad Campaign

Posted by Mary on 29/02/2008 at 18:06

Last Friday, Fouad Mourtada was sentenced to 3 years in jail for posting a joke profile of the Moroccan King's brother on Facebook.  But it's not too late to reduce or reverse this ridiculous sentence.  Please take a photo of yourself with a message to Free Fouad.  (Please also write where you are from in the message) then send the photo to helpfouad@gmail.com

Here are some I took here at Harvard:

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isaac_fouad_small.jpg 

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Sign the Petition to Free Fouad Mourtada

Posted by Mary on 27/02/2008 at 13:17

Last Friday, Moroccan computer engineer Fouad Mourtada was sentenced to 3 years in jail for posting a fake profile of Prince Rachid (the King of Morocco's brother).

His sister Amina has set up a web page www.helpfouad.com to push for the decision to be reversed. Part of this effort (more actions to come) is a petition to free Fouad.

Please click the image below to sign the petition:

Fouad_mourtada_petition.jpg


In Morocco, Facebook is a Crime

Posted by Mary on 24/02/2008 at 20:12

On February 5, computer engineer Fouad Mourtada was blindfolded and taken from his house in Casablanca, Morocco. He was taken to a police station where he was harassed and spat on by local police. Two weeks later, on February 22, he was sentence to three years in prison and a $1350 fine. His crime was creating a fake profile of Prince Moulay Rachid, the King's brother on Facebook.

As Laila Lalami comments on The Nation's web site, "there are fake profiles on Facebook for everyone from Brad Pitt to Mother Teresa, from King Abdullah to Osama bin Laden.

(Read more)

Morocco Raises Its Voice

Posted by Mary on 19/01/2008 at 21:23
Morocco_voice_300px.jpg This report was written before I got into digital activism, but it might still be of interest.  This is my final report from my year as a Fulbright scholar in Morocco from 2004-2005.  It was through the researching this report that I fell in love with grassroots activism, which eventually lead me to my current profession of digital activism consulting.  In this report I analyze the new Moroccan political NGO sector, made possible through liberalization in the late nineties under the new King Mohammed VI.  In the report I analyze the activities of these organizations, breaking them down into four (Read more)

My Digital Activism Biography

Posted by Mary on 19/01/2008 at 20:25

In 2006, I founded ZapBoom Consulting, a firm which looks at how digital tools like cell phones and the Internet can be used in campaigns for social change, particularly in developing countries. I have researched and written reports on topics ranging from online citizen journalism to blog advocacy and internet censorship. I have also performed in-country Internet monitoring and international conference organizing.

I first became interested in digital activism in 2004-2005 while living in Morocco. It was the fall after my graduation from Vassar College and I was working as a Programs Assistant at the National Democratic Institute in

(Read more)

Digital Activists in Morocco

Posted by Mary on 27/09/2007 at 23:11

I said a few days ago that Moroccan democracy is near and dear to my heart and that while the government is shameful, the activists are inspiring. Well, I'd like to be more specific: these activists are inspiring. These three friends (two of then expats) created a photoblog site to record photos related to the upcoming election. You can read Jen Brea's interview with them here at Global Voices.  Here are some examples of the photos on their site:

"no to corruption"

 

"we Moroccans living abroad want the right to vote."

I was also really tickled to learn that they

(Read more)

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Quote of the Week

"If you think you can influence the agenda, you walk through the world with different eyes and different ears."

-Yochai Benkler

What is Digital Activism?

Digital activism means grassroots activists using digital technologies like cell phones and the internet to increase their impact, thus subverting traditional power hierarchies and changing the world.

The Blog Advocacy Guide

        

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