Internet Diplomacy Track


by John Helie

October 2001

The time has come to consider the Internet as a full fledged Diplomatic Track. It is uniquely different than the Media/News Track and it has a growing significance in Citizen to Citizen diplomacy

The Internet is not new to the diplomatic world. It has been used very effectively in many global situations.

ConflictNet, one of the earliest online ADR communities was developed under the organizational umbrella of the Institute for Global Communications (IGC). PeaceNet and EcoNet were the first focus communities of IGC and ConflictNet came along to be the third. WomensNet, and LaborNet were developed soon after. This was in the late 1980's. This amazing IGC began working with other countries to develop similar configurations. The U.K., Canadian, and Australian groups were contacted and they shared "know how" and often the technology to develop a node which could share email and a Newsgroup, which was a form of Text only Forum.

To avoid becoming Network emperialists, IGC joined with it's partners to form the Association For Progressive Communications. You can still find addresses of @igc.apc.org , and @green.apc.org (U.K.)and @web.apc.org and @pegasus.apc.org. The APC soon developed Glasnet (glas.apc.net) This was during Glasnost and GlasNet seemed right.

The APC was very actively communicating on a person to person channel during various coups and uprisings. The technical, administrative, and communication staffs of these nodes were forming a powerful network, building communities and moving information and opinions. When other Tracks were stuck, we were communicating. It's size and impact are dwarfed in the current Internet world, but The APC took a place in world affairs.

With the rise of interest in creating online communities it seems that with appropriate care and some effective process management we could create global discussion groups; a new form of Citizen diplomacy. Acknowledging that only a small portion of the global population is online and that it is in no way representative, there is still an opportunity to expand the dialogue. We can reach out and invite an ever widening group of people to engage in dialogue and develop community.

Facilitation is key! As conflict resolution practitioners we can begin the process by learning to more effectively facilitate online discussions. Are we the most effective communicators online?

-----



to top of page



As one of the founding directors of the Mediation Information and Resource Center at www.mediate.com, John continues his commitment to dispute resolution and the Internet. John founded ConflictNet in 1989, as a communication forum and information sharing network for the Conflict Resolution Practitioners community. A trained mediator and facilitator, John has pioneered work being done with online conflict and communication. His interest in conflict resolution and the Internet led to his involvement with RuleNet, an Internet/Web based Regulatory Negotiation Process sponsored by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. He designed software tools for building and evaluating consensus within the RuleNet project and was the first facilitator to use this technology.

Website: www.heliegroup.com




Comments



Free subscription to comments on this article Add Brief Comment

-- --
 John  Helie,   Berkeley CA  jrhelie@mediate.com      10/29/01 
 Relationships 
--
-- -- --
Please share with us a short story of a relationship you have that is primarily supported by the Internet.
-- -- --
--
Add New Comment
--
--
--

The views expressed by authors are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of Resourceful Internet Solutions, Inc., Mediate.com or of reviewing editors.




Nova Southeastern University

Copyright 1996-2009 © Resourceful Internet Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.