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in Yemen, to around 80% in most European countries. While some funders were already cultivating trust-based and flexible practices before the pandemic, more began to re-think their practices. Two years after the start of the pandemic, vaccination rates still vary from 0.6% in the DRC and 1.4%
The curriculum is based on the ideas in the Networked Nonprofit and includes social media strategy development as well as practical skills training. In Morocco, the team has been sharing case studies about how NGOs have put the lessons in the workshop into practice. I started work on the E-Mediat project over a year ago.
The Morocco Team discussed how Youth Without Borders is a networked network and the Yemen Team pointed out how the Youth Leadership Development Foundation is one as well. Lina Aleryani , Team Leader from Yemen, offered this reflection on her workshop blog during “laptop time.&#. Transparency and “ Arab NGOs” can they go together?
While they are fun (and addicting), they are most useful if you set aside some time to not only generate the visual, but think about what does it mean for your current practice. The discipline of noticing your own practice in adopting a network mindset is important.
The New Media for the Networked NGO Networking Conference provided NGOs who participated in the E-Mediat program the opportunity to come together to share best practices, successes, challenges and lessons learned from their use of social media to effectively advance their organization’s work.
Earlier this month, I had an opportunity to facilitate a full-day innovation lab for an amazing group of network thinkers using human design methods to inform the design of a leadership network. It has been exactly a year since I have committed to practicing the methods from Luma Institute as part of improving my facilitation practice.
At SXSW and facilitating a panel called A Global Discussion About Networked Nonprofits and Free Agents , I introduced myself with this photo of me and Lena, the master trainer from Yemen for the E-Mediat Project. The photo shows us modeling “shoulder to shoulder&# learning.
The goal is to train over 150-250 NGOs in Jordan, Lebanon, Yemen, Morocco, and other countries and help them put social media skills into practice. In addition to Zoetica, implementation partners include SMEX Beirut , TechSoup Global , and Meedan directly, plus a network of in-country teams and training partners.
E-Mediat is working with more than 220 NGOs in Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Tunisia, and Yemen. The program is managed by the Institute of International Education (IIE), and implemented with a coalition of leading new media experts and local and international partners from the public and private sectors.
I invited Roz Lemieux is CEO of Attentively and founding partner at Fission Strategy to write a guest post sharing the best and next practices for nonprofits to use listening effectively as part of their social media strategy. When more and more people began mentioning Yemen online, their trending terms chart in Attentive.ly
To model and practice integrating the use of social media tools and networked approaches to document, deliver, and share learning. In the morning, we did a team building exercise to better understand the network core, the in-country teams from Yemen, Morocco, Lebanon, Tunisia, and Jordan.
That’s more than the estimated GDP of Iceland and Yemen combined, according to the International Monetary Fund ). million last year but committed $1 million to racial justice, regularly comes under scrutiny for shady business practices ; it could use a win in the press. Apple’s $100 million represents just 0.18 percent of the $55.3
A short competition also enabled participants to put what they learnt to practical use by conceptualizing business plans. Libya, Djibouti and Jordan have also granted restricted access to micro data to selected individuals and organizations.
For example, United to End Genocide (UEG) used social listening to inform their decision on when to ramp up their campaign efforts in Yemen last year. Noticing an uptick in mentions of Yemen by supporters, they responded in an incredibly effective and practical way that resulted in thousands of mentions of the campaign.
government officials planning to bomb Yemen. So it seems that when Waltz attempted to add Hughes to the Yemen bombing Signal group chat in March, he inadvertently added Goldberg instead, making the reporter privy to sensitive military information. Now we may finally know how it happened.
This alone is already a questionable security practice. military positions via Gmail is not a great security practice. officials were planning to bomb Yemen. Specifically, The Washington Post reports that Waltz had work documents and information on his schedule sent to his Gmail account. Discussing U.S.
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