ie8 fix
madison

Modern communities - no longer exclusive clubs

By | January 29, 2010, 1:16pm PST

Summary: The concept of a community is not new. In fact, it is very old.

Guest editorial from Lovisa Williams

I’ve been thinking a lot about the idea of community and how this applies to the digital world. It is something that a lot of people talk about, but I fear it is from learning the buzz words instead of from real understanding.

The concept of a community is not new. In fact, it is very old. Humans have always had the need to be part of a group. In modern life we have home owners associations, hobby groups, sports teams, church groups, civic organizations, fraternities/sororities and more. In high school it was very apparent what group you did or did not belong to.

What draws those people together is a common set of societal norms and over time a culture for the community develops. That culture can be reflected in their physical appearance, how they dress, their mannerisms, how they treat each other and the fact that each of them has something to gain from being a part of the group.

This is what a community is all about.

Over this past summer, I went to visit one of my good friends from Second Life. He lives in the Netherlands and invited me to attend one of the Netherlands famous cultural arts festivals called Oerol. It is held every year on the island of Terschelling, which is located off the north west coast of the Netherlands.

It is a wild and beautiful island. People from all over Europe come there to camp out, attend the art and cultural events and celebrate living. People of all ages and backgrounds come together as one community of equals. Everyone is welcome. The Dutch have an interesting culture that very much epitomized what community means to me.

The Dutch have an amazing tolerance level for all kinds of people from all walks of life and from all age groups. At Oerol everyone is welcome. By participating in Oreol I learned what it means to be part of a vibrant active community where everyone participates.

It is unlike anything I’d ever experienced before. I don’t think we have the same concepts of community or inclusiveness here in the United States.

For me, this experience is what is mirrored online. It is less about being judged from your appearance, your age, or where you are from. It is much more about being respected for your individual uniqueness, and building relationships with others based on common ground.

This ideal of a community is what I educate people on. It is what I strive for them to understand when I speak about making the government more human; by developing our human voices. Developing government’s human voice is about establishing a personality that someone can interact and talk with, not to; a more human like presence to what has always been a nameless, faceless beast. It’s about finding a way to build real meaningful relationships with others built on common interests and trust. It is also about having everyone in a society participating.

In a world where our issues and problems are becoming more complex and intertwined, we cannot hope to solve these things without the help of the community.

Government is no different. We now have the tools to help us be more inclusive (participatory) and trustworthy (transparency). Yet, we need to work harder at building collaborative relationships across agency lines, outside of government to the education community, the non profit community, non-government organizations, private sector and with other governments in ways we have never done before.

By doing these things we will be able to start changing the culture of government and helping to provide better services to our citizens in the United States and to the larger global community.

I have taken some inspiration from my experiences at Oerol and by what my Dutch friends have taught me about community. Through my work on the Government 2.0 Camp LA, I have tried to remember those lessons about community and apply them here.

I have searched for people from a variety of different places, backgrounds and industries to help teach us about community, social media and most of all about how to build these new kinds of collaborative relationships.

I hope you find this is not your average Camp or Conference. This is not a “tech event” or a “government event”. This is an event for all kinds of people from various backgrounds and industries who are united in their belief that they can solve complex problems and know collectively they have a chance at success.

This is about bringing people together to solve problems that impact us all. I hope you will come participate and lend your voice and experience to this event.

We need you.

The Government 2.0 Camp LA is scheduled to take place from February 5-7, 2010. For more information and to register to participate go to http://Gov20LA.org or follow us @Gov20LA_ or #Gov20LA

Photo licensed Creative Commons. Photo by Loonatic.

Kick off your day with ZDNet's daily e-mail newsletter. It's the freshest tech news and opinion, served hot. Get it.

Topics

Jennifer Leggio, aka "Mediaphyter," writes about the "social business" side of social media - including enterprise, security and reputation issues.

Disclosure

Jennifer Leggio

Jennifer is employed full-time with Fortinet, a leading network security appliance vendor. She is also actively involved in the network security community and works with the Security Bloggers Network. She co-manages the annual Security Bloggers Meet-UP at RSA Conference.

Jennifer is also involved with Silicon Valley Tweet-Up, a philanthropic networking event that brings people together to raise money for local family-oriented charities.

The blog posts here are solely her opinion and do not represent her employer or any other organization with which she may be affiliated.

Biography

Jennifer Leggio

Jennifer Leggio (@mediaphyter) has been a communications professional for more than 15 years, focusing primarily on enterprise technology and security. She is currently the director of strategic communications for a leading network security vendor. Jennifer is also passionate about all things social media, especially enterprise, security, privacy and reputation issues, which is why she writes about these things for ZDNet.

A well-connected communicator, Jennifer has led or supported interactive social networking efforts for security industry conferences including RSA Conference, Black Hat USA and SOURCE Conference, and founded the Security Twits, a community for network security professionals. She also helps run communications for the Security Bloggers Network.

Finally, Jennifer co-hosts the Quick'n'Dirty social media podcast with Aaron Strout, is a founding member of Technically Women, a communal blog project, and manages marketing and public relations for Silicon Valley Tweet-Up, a networking group that raises money for family-oriented charities. Jennifer was profiled in Silicon Valley San Jose Business Journal's "40 Under 40" edition, as a rising star for 2009.

Related Discussions on TechRepublic

Did you know you can take part in these discussions with your ZDNet membership?

The discussion hasn’t started yet. Why don’t you begin it?

Formatting +
BB Codes - Note: HTML is not supported in forums
  • [b] Bold [/b]
  • [i] Italic [/i]
  • [u] Underline [/u]
  • [s] Strikethrough [/s]
  • [q] "Quote" [/q]
  • [ol][*] 1. Ordered List [/ol]
  • [ul][*] · Unordered List [/ul]
  • [pre] Preformat [/pre]
  • [quote] "Blockquote" [/quote]
ie8 fix
Click Here
ie8 fix
Click Here

The best of ZDNet, delivered

ZDNet Newsletters

Get the best of ZDNet delivered straight to your inbox

Facebook Activity

White Papers, Webcasts, & Resources
ie8 fix
Click Here
ie8 fix