Have you ever stopped to wonder how no access to the internet affects one's work, studies, access to information and communication with friends and family? And how this can reflect and, at the same time, reinforce inequalities?
We are delighted to launch our new Routing for Communities podcast. With 12 episodes, this podcast will be a journey of listening to the life stories of those connecting themselves while defending the fundamental rights and well-being of their communities in remote, rural and urban areas across the globe.
Around 2.9 billion people – 37% of the world's population – have never used the internet, according to the publication “Measuring digital development: Facts and figures 2021”. The figures also show that the situation can be worse depending on the country and if we look at differences in gender, age, income or between urban and rural areas, for example. And it is to overcome such digital divides that community networks have been established out there.
During our season together, we will learn about community-led experiences of people who have come up with alternatives to overcome the challenges of digital inclusion in different places, such as South Africa, Mexico, Argentina, Kenya, Brazil, Indonesia, Nigeria, India and Colombia. We will get inspired by stories and voices that are intertwined, connected by a common thread: building internet and communication community networks. And we will learn more about the local realities and needs, and understand why a bottom-up approach is key to promoting connectivity to co-create a free, safe and worthwhile digital future, leaving no one behind.
Listen the available episodes:
#1 Women connecting a village
In our first episode, we discover an inspiring experience from South Africa: the Mamaila Community Network, which is connecting a rural area that had been ignored by major service providers, while building digital skills. And we learn more about community networks with Kgopotso Magoro from South Africa and Claire Milne from the UK. Play.
#2 The vibrancy of Kibera residents
The second episode takes us on a trip to Kenya to visit TunapandaNET, an initiative that combines digital networks with community-led action to enable communication, education and health in Kibera, the biggest slum in Africa. We will find out more about this initiative and the community networks movement through the voices of Risper Akinyi Arose, a young resident from Kibera who participates in many projects involving digital inclusion and communication, and Peter Bloom from Rhizomatica, which works to promote community networks and technical autonomy and training. Play.
#3 The first Indigenous virtual operator in Mexico
This month we invite you to come with us on a journey to meet Wiki Katat, the first Indigenous virtual operator providing internet and mobile phone services in Mexico. In our third episode, you will get to know Flor Lino, who is part of Wiki Katat and also of an Indigenous community radio station in the country. You will also meet Lilian Chamorro, who works in many organisations related to the field of community networks in Latin America. Play.
#4 Resisting in South Africa’s Wild Coast
In the fourth episode you will get to know the Amadiba Community Network, a project that has been strengthening the community in the defence of their land, the coast of their country and their people. Guiding us on this journey is Lungelo Mtwa, from Pondoland, a region on the coast of South Africa bathed by the Indian Ocean. Today, the region is one of the last vestiges of the country's untouched coastline, known as the Wild Coast. But Amadiba is known not only for its natural beauty and the preservation of its traditions, but also as a community that is threatened by a titanium mining project. In this episode we also interviewed Mike Jensen, an internet pioneer working at the Association for Progressive Communications (APC). Play.
#5 Learning from communities in Argentina
In this episode, you will travel to a rural area in Córdoba, Argentina. There we will get to know the Quintana Libre community network. With a strong community networks movement, in the last years, Argentina started to develop state programmes in support of community-led models for connectivity. For this story, we talked to Jessica Giudice, a Quintana Libre member and AlterMundi co-founder. We also talked to Natalia Vinelli, who is also in Argentina and deputy director of Special Projects at ENACOM – the country’s regulation authority for communication media and telecommunications. Play.
#6 Community networks enabling art, culture and communication in Indonesia
Let's go to Indonesia together to meet the Common Room Networks Foundation and its co-founder Gustaff Iskandar. This is an organisation that works with art, culture, communication and new technologies. They helped build the community network in Ciptagelar Traditional Village, in West Java. This inspiring initiative presents alternatives for community-led connectivity in a country where around 12,000 villages are still disconnected. In this episode, we also spoke with Carlos Rey-Moreno, from the Association for Progressive Communications (APC). Play.