Editorial:

Putting Our Work in Context

 

Michael Gurstein

New Jersey Institute of Technology < gurstein@adm.njit.edu >

 

In February of this year I had the opportunity of participating in the Canadian West Coast Community Networking Summit, “Strategic Use of Information and Communication Technology for Communities,” in Vancouver, Canada.

 

( http://www.2005summit.ca/  ).  The event was a striking success in that it attracted some 500 participants, almost all from the two western provinces of Canada; a very large proportion of Canadian aboriginals (First Nations); and community technology activists and researchers.  Few, if any of those attending indicated any hesitation as to the kinds of changes and opportunities that community ICTs were providing to their communities.

 

I attended as a member of the Canadian Research Alliance for Community Innovation and Networking (CRACIN) and also of the Community Informatics Research Network (CIRN), both of which sponsored or co-sponsored events as part of the overall “Summit”.

 

A number of things were notable during the 4 days of presentations, meetings, workshops, plenaries, informal chats in corridors and bars, and formal dinners:

 

While on the one side there was optimism and enthusiasm for the future, on the other side was a deep concern that the basis for much of this development – a commitment by the Canadian Government to ensure a degree of “access” (connectivity) for all – was in the process of being declared “achieved” with the result that Government support and attention was shifting to other areas.

 

Many practitioners attending the event were particularly welcoming of the participation by we researchers as they were looking to us as a means for identifying and documenting the positive benefits that had been achieved to date and as a source of support in developing the convincing evidence for continued support in these areas from politicians and government policy makers.

 

And overall, there was a concern for “sustainable” financing models for Community Based Technology initiatives given the long-term instability of current Government funding approaches.

 

There was a considerable interest on the part of the community technology practitioners in the work of the researchers.  The practitioners were looking to us for ways of documenting impacts and outcomes and for methodologies by which they could achieve self-understanding and self-assessment of appropriate and useful operating models and practices. In this way a set of on-going working relationships between researchers and community practitioners were being developed on a broader basis than the specifics of an individual university-based research project and this was being anchored with the background context of quite specific and directed policy processes.

 

This is the third issue of the Journal, and I’m delighted to say that we have been very well received by colleagues worldwide and by a range of researchers, practitioners and policy staff. The most “popular” article from the first issue, Scott Robinson of the Universidad Metropolitana, Mexico “Towards a Neo-Apartheid System of Governance in Latin America –Implications for the Community Informatics Guild”, has been down-loaded 2200 times; and from the second issue. Stephen James Musgrave of The Fylde College in the UK’s piece “Community Portals: A False Dawn over the Field of Dreams?” has been downloaded 1200 times.  We now have over 250 registered “subscribers” and some 100 contributors and the equivalent number of signed-up reviewers.

 

It is probably a bit early to start checking citation indexes, but I am beginning to see references to CI Journal articles appearing in some conference and student project papers and we have a bit of a back-log in contributions for up-coming issues and offers to edit special issues on special topic areas.

 

So, by the various obvious measures we have begun to fill the academic need. By the other, and probably more significant measures, that is whether we are making a contribution to the discipline, to the field, to researchers, to practitioners or to policy development, of course remains to be seen but my hope (and expectation) and I think that of all those involved with this effort are that we will have impacts and outcomes in those areas as well.

 

This issue reflects the diversity of research (and practice) in the area of CI, including: