Originally published: May 4, 2011
Last updated: May 4, 2011 - 5:07pm
When the earthquake decimated Haiti last year, technologists around the world converged online to develop tools to help rescuers find victims and raise funds. Now the State Department wants to see if it can take that impulse and put it to work helping grassroots organizations tackle humanitarian problems around the world even when there isn't a horrible disaster to deal with.
To do that, the State Department is convening a series of “TechCamps” in different parts of the globe this year to bring together non-governmental organizations that know the problems, with technology experts who might have innovative ideas about how to tackle them. “We saw the ability of digital natives and the networked world, using lightweight and easily iterated tools, to do something rapidly that a big organization or government would find difficult, if not impossible, to do,” said Richard Boly, the State Department’s director of eDiplomacy. “The question is: Can we get that same magic to happen when people aren't dying?”
- Login or register to post comments
- Email this page
Related
- Text messages and mapping tools are helping victims of Haiti earthquake
- Knight Study: Broadcasting Still Top Information Source In Emergencies
- In Haiti, Practicing Medicine From Afar
- US diplomacy embracing Twitter amid global crises
- Cell Phones Help Pakistani Relief Effort
- In a health crisis, it's public radio to the rescue
- Burst of Mobile Giving Adds Millions in Relief Funds
- FEMA chief taps social media's potential for aiding disaster response
- A Deluge of Donations via Text Messages
- A Tool for Activists Is Simplified for the Less Tech Savvy
- Establishing telecommunications systems tops feds' to-do list for Haiti
- Telehealth and Mobile Communications
- Earthquake Communications Preparedness Forum
- Telecom companies seek to make Haiti a mobile nation
- FCC Reaches Out to Japanese Officials
Topics
Location
Ratings
Login to rate this headline.

