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Brussels, 9/9/11: 1st Dialogue on
Platforms for Collective Awareness and Action - Reports and presentations now available
Collective Awareness Platforms
Collective Awareness Platforms for Social
Innovation and Sustainable Social Changes (CAPS) are
ICT systems leveraging the emerging "network effect" by combining open online
social media, distributed knowledge creation and data from real environments
(Internet of Things), in order to create new forms of social innovation.
They are expected to support environmentally aware, grassroots processes and
practices to share knowledge, to achieve changes in lifestyle, production and
consumption patterns, and to set up more participatory democratic processes.
Is our lifestyle sustainable?
Our world has progressed tremendously in the last decades, but its sustainability is threatened by equally
tremendous challenges related to natural resources and environmental constraints, which are at the root of
environmental, financial, energy and social crises. Several efforts have been made by governments and public
organisations to cope with these crises, however much more can be done if citizens are more actively involved,
in a grassroots manner. There is consensus about the global span of the problem, but little awareness of the
role that each and everyone of us can play in coping with this.
Be the change you wish to see in the world.
Is it possible to connect, share, collaborate, decide, act -
locally or globally - without mediation?
Gandhi said "If we could change ourselves, the tendencies in the world would
also change", as part of his higher vision that unjust authority can be
non-violently overturned only by great numbers of people working together with
discipline and persistence.
Similarly, our vision is that individuals can
collectively "save the planet" if they are given the opportunity to act socially,
based on trusted information. The key is enabling access to trusted knowledge about the state of the
environment, the actions underway in our Communities to improve that situation, and the impact of our own
actions. The extended awareness can be enabled by ICT technologies, for instance by exploiting paradigms
from both Wikipedia and Facebook to develop decentralised and federated social networks, interfaced in
real-time to the environment through networks of sensors, participated and owned by any single citizen,
both in terms of access and content creation. These "Platforms for Collective Awareness and Action" will
support environmentally aware, grassroots processes and practices to share knowledge, to achieve changes
in lifestyle, production and consumption patterns, and to set up more participatory democratic processes.
What for?
The distributed situational awareness enabled by such platforms can then have concrete impacts, for instance
in empowering (and motivating) citizens to make informed decisions and consumer choices, in real time,
fostering collective environmentally-savvy behavioural changes and a more direct
democratic participation. These platforms would be collective tools
of social innovation, to design new visions of sustainable societies and environmentally sound solutions.
Concrete examples of technical functionalities would include:
- accessing real-time and easily understandable information on resource consumption
- comparing individual lifestyles against some ecological / environmental benchmark
- defining and accessing complex environmental models and simulations
Ultimately, these platforms will enable dialogues and discussions in the civil society to collectively orchestrate the most appropriate actions in a truly democratic, informed and non-mediated manner.
How to build platforms for Collective Awareness and Action?
As a first step investigating this vision, DG Information Society and Media
launches a broad consultation openly including citizens and stakeholders.
This could lead to the definition of multidisciplinary research priorities for the
last call of FP7 and for FP8.
The first
workshop
on this topic was held on 9/9/11 in Brussels.
You can post your interest and express your
ideas on the "Open
Forum".
This action is launched at the initiative of DG Information Society's Director
General, Mr. Robert Madelin.