Tuesday, January 14, 2014

TED'S DIGITAL JUNGLE #16 - DIGITAL DOCUMENTARY #3

III. Digital Documentary and the Digital Revolution:

         We stand on the threshold of a telecommunications revolution- a revolution potentially as profound and far-reaching as the agricultural and industrial revolutions. The one significant difference between the present changes is that the telecommunications revolution is happening so fast, we can actually be aware of it… We have the ability to make the revolution anything we want it to be.”

     Jay Ruby, “The Ethics of Image Making” [1]


III.1. The New World Information Order: A Foreshadowing:

In 1980, UNESCO, the United Nations Scientific, Educational and Cultural Organization, announced the need for something called The New World Information Order. The stated intent was to address the undeniably superficial coverage of the developing world in the globally dominant Western media, following the example set by the New World Economic Order created by the United Nations General Assembly to reset the rules for international commerce.

According to UNESCO, Western news media projected a very unfavorable image of the developing world with its focus on events, rather than processes; however, rather than find creative ways of producing new, alternative media on the grass roots level in the developing world, the NWIO proposed to rectify this imbalance from the top down - through Draconian government regulations which, among other things, would make it necessary for all journalists to obtain government-issued licenses to practice their profession.

The response from the Western world was swift and harsh. After all, freedom of the press has long been a sacred cow in the West, and government interference in the communications media has been officially taboo since World War II.  In reality, of course, manipulation and disinformation campaigns are quietly tolerated, as long as they are very discrete; the sinister Orwellian over tones of the very name New World Information Order made the whole proposal an easy target, and condemnation was virtually universal in the Western media.


This condemnation was followed by a series of Western media attacks on UNESCO itself, as well as very personal attacks on its Senegalese Director-General, Amadou Mahtar Mbow, whose penchant for high-living and autocratic management style had made him many enemies both inside and outside the United Nations system. Mbow responded with a vigorous defense, stating that he was the victim of a ‘veritable smear campaign”, and adding that, as the first ( and , at that time, the only) African senior manager in the UN system at the time, he was being treated “like an American black who has no rights.” [2]

In 1984, the United States left UNESCO, and was soon followed by the United Kingdom and Singapore; in 1987, Mbow was replaced by Fernando Mayor Zaragoza of Spain, and the New World Information Order was thrown into the dustbin of historical obscurity. Unfortunately, many of the very real problems caused by the Western global media monopoly the proposal had sought to confront were also consigned to oblivion in the West, though less so in the developing world . As some anonymous Korean once said when asked about the difference between Korea and Japan, “ Oppressors have short memories, but the oppressed can never forget.”[3]

III.2.  The Digital Revolution – A New World Information Order in Progress:

Ironically, today, a little more than three decades later, a genuine New World Information Order has actually been created – though without any action by any United Nations organization or member state. Indeed, this New World Information Order is fundamentally different from anything envisioned by the members of UNESCO, since it is technological rather than political.

This technology is universal in that it cannot discriminate and is available to anyone virtually anywhere, and it is democratic in that it is relatively inexpensive. However, this technology is also inherently subversive, since it is constantly evolving at a rapid rate, and is therefore all but impossible to control, making authoritarian governments ruling with centralized control an endangered species.
It therefore comes as no surprise that many delegates to most recent UNESCO spin-off to the NWIO,  the World Summit on the Information Society, (www.wsis.org/forum) were concerned with finding a way to monitor and control what is now  called The Digital Revolution. [4]

Now that the digital genie is out of the bottle, so to speak, governments and international organizations have been having great difficulties harnessing it.  Indeed, in the first 10 months of 2012, there have been a bewildering series of explosive media events which would have been inconceivable prior to the proliferation of digital technology, and which are indications that growth of digital technological communications may be spiraling out of control.

 To cite a few well-publicized examples:  an inflammatory video of execrable quality gets sudden worldwide distribution, provoking a very violent response in many of the Muslim countries of the world; a Russian feminist punk rock group which had never made a record becomes an international cause celebre when they are arrested by police performing illegally in a Moscow church; an American presidential candidate is exposed making disturbing remarks to supporters at a political fundraiser by a hidden camera, and the resulting video goes viral on social media, and is a major factor in determining the outcome of the election; and, now, most recently, the sudden resignation of the director of the American Central Intelligence Agency due to embarrassing e-mails discovered in the course of an unrelated investigation into a squabble between two American women.

 Meanwhile, moving images of both trivial and dramatic events – including demonstrations, wars and atrocities from around the world are recorded on the ground by individuals with cell phone cameras, and then uploaded onto websites which can be seen by virtually anyone anywhere  - that is, anywhere with access to the internet. [5]

The sole common denominator of these disparate phenomena is the humbling power of the digital media to create and disseminate information at an incredibly high speed. The genie may well be out of the bottle, but we urgently need to understand some of the lessons and implications of these changes to be able to harness the energy of this telecommunications revolution to better serve the needs of the planet and its inhabitants rather than be manipulated or controlled by it. 

The challenge is to observe and assess these phenomena  as rapidly evolving as well as happening, and to then develop strategies that will not be out of date when actually applied. For governments and bureaucratic institutions, where decision-making can move at a glacial pace, this is perhaps the ultimate challenge




[1] Jay Ruby, (The Ethics of Image Making) in New Challenges in Documentary, Alan Rosenthal, Editor; Manchester University Press, 2005, p.219

[2] www.answers.com/topic/amadou-mahtar-m-bow
[3] Source unknown
[4] As McLuhan wrote in 1968,”In the name of progress, our official culture is striving to force the new media to do the work of the old.” Marshall McLuhan and Quentin Fiore, (The Medium is the Massage ) Bantam Press,  1968 p.81 

[5] According to the International Telecommunications Union, an estimated 35% of the world’s population of c. 7 billion had internet access in 2011.  The number having internet access worldwide has grown from 670 million in 2002 to 2.45 billion in 2011. However, internet access is not distributed equally within or between countries – hence the so-called “digital divide.” En.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_access#Availability