Concerns for the Next U.S. President (Part I)
I had the fortunate opportunity of attending a session at the Netroots Nation conference on "America's Role in the World after the Bush Presidency" with a specific focus on foreign policy. Prior to attending the session, I was familiar with the term, "Pax Americana," coined as a term referring to the United States' post-WWII military and economic position. A significant part of the world had looked to the United States as a nation filled with opportunity and prosperity.
- April Joy Damian's blog
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Slides from Netroots Nation: Marketing and monetizing your progressive blog, using social networks to grow your blog's community
Jason Rosenbaum, who blogs for the Sentinel and has been on several excellent online strategy panels this weekend, just posted slides from two panels about blog management.
Many of the tips (particularly with regard to repostability) are ones that we've been considering for the YP4 Blog. I hope that the slides will be useful to those of who you run your own blogs.
What looks valuable to you? What do you think is goofy?
- Rebecca Fureigh's blog
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Series 1: (A) Capital Flow in Zambia and Bostwana
- George Mtonga's blog
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Farming Progressive Political Leaders
Working outside of the box is the title of a panel I'm sititng in right now at the blogger conference, Netroots Nation, in Austin. The panel is about how to find and run progressive candidates. It was introduced by Dean Nielsen of Progressive Majority who proclaimed with certainty, twice, that P.M. is the only progressive candidate recruitment and selection organization. The point of this blog is not to call that claim into question, but it is to acknowledge that the candidate recrutiment out of existing youth leaderhsip develpment organizations is a pipeline that needs to be built and brought to scale.
The Blogosphere: Alternative for the Common People?
I'm blogging again from the Netroots Nation conference in Austin, Texas, and continue to be impressed with how my fellow participants have jumped on this technology as a means of expressing ideas, opinions, and general information that might not have otherwise been available. As the conference has progressed, I have a deeper appreciation for how the Internet, including the blogosphere, has helped us connect with each other, even at the international level, almost instantaneously.
- April Joy Damian's blog
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Series 1: CAPITAL FLOW IN ZAMBIA AND BOSTWANA
The purpose of this investigation is to empirically investigate the relationship between Foreign Direct Investment and Economic Growth in Bostwana and Zambia with economic growth being seen through an expansion in trade as well as Gross Domestic Product for the respective countries from 1990-2000. The motivation for the investigation of the presence of foreign investments and the relationship they have to economic growth is a result of debates within the field of economics regarding the role that foreign investments play in a economy. Scholars have explored the topic with some focusing on statistical evidence ( 0L’ 1922, Hou 1965) while others provide the theoretical frameworks through which foreign investments have been viewed( Rothgeb 1996).
- George Mtonga's blog
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Political young people: (Mostly) acknowledged. Now what?
Last year at Netroots Nation, I argued extensively with a middle-aged man who fervently believed — no matter what evidence I presented to the contrary — that young people are politically apathetic and, in particular, don't vote.
Nobody's making that argument this year. Instead, folks — and by "folks" I here mean people over the age of 35 or so — are marveling aloud at the youth turnout, especially around the Obama campaign and the Democratic primaries. Some are confiding their concern that youth may not hold their representatives accountable once they're elected.
- Rebecca Fureigh's blog
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Live from Austin!
Live from Netroots Nation! The most redundantly covered event on the internets. Ever sense Neanderthal man scraped two opinions together to make a flame, he has dreamed of such a place. Two interesting things that have happened and I have learned.
1. You know that crazy guy who comments on the blogs you read? The one with the bad grammar? Yeah, he talks like that.
2. Wesley Clark and Howard Dean were the keynote speakers last night. Immediate Vice-President speculation/debate over who was better looking. Clark won after Dean tried to smile.
…
Howard Dean should never smile.
More soon!
Reviving the American Dream through Unions
I've been fortunate enough to join some of the YP4 staff here at the Netroots Nation Conference in Austin, Texas. One of the goals I shared with other YP4 attendees was connecting with other leaders in the progressive movement who have used the blogsphere as a means of pushing our respective social concerns, particularly racial/gender/economic justice. While my main passion lies in healthcare reform and inequalities in health, based on my personal experience and academic/civil work, I recognize the need to learn about other areas, including the environment, workers' rights, access to affordable higher education, and how they affect our nation's health.
- April Joy Damian's blog
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I Vote, You Vote!
This was forwarded to me this morning... I Vote, You Vote (a project of American Democracy Institute and CREDO Mobile) is "a peer-to-peer system built to get more young people to vote. It is more than just voter registration because it allows politically engaged individuals to finally get their social networks to register."
- Zachary Dryden's blog
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