USIP has teamed up with Digital Democracy to train women activists in Haiti to monitor and report violence in their communities. 

USIP has teamed up with Digital Democracy to train women activists in Haiti to monitor and report violence in their communities.  Digital Democracy is a grassroots organization devoted to empowering civic engagement through mobile technology. Since 2010, Digital Democracy has conducted two workshops for Haitian women in Port-au-Prince on how to use cell phone and other forms of information technology to prevent conflict. 

The first workshop -- conducted in the Fall of 2010 in the lead up to the national elections -- focused on monitoring election violence.  Fifty Haitian women activists learned how to conduct mobile reporting, aggregate reports into crisis maps, and contribute to a shared blog.  After the workshop, trainees participated in a six-week program, employing their new skills to monitor and report on key issues and conditions in their communities through the shared blog, Fanm Pale.  When election day came, observers were surprised by the relatively low levels of violence, despite irregularities and prolonged uncertainty.

The second workshop, held in the Fall of 2011, focused on deepening the women’s citizen journalism skills and broadening their scope.  Staff of KOFAVIV (the Commission of Women Victims for Victims), a grassroots Haitian women's organization that works with victims of sexual violence, attended the workshop as well.  The workshop provided more hands-on training in photography, interviewing, blogging, Facebook, and Twitter.  Specific skills included embedding video clips into blog posts; adding hashtags, links, and photos to tweets; and protecting sources’ identities in reports.  More broadly, the training laid the groundwork for the women activists to expand their monitoring efforts beyond election violence to gender-based violence, post-earthquake reconstruction, and other issues related to the situation of women in Haiti.  Over the course of the workshop, participants identified key sources of insecurity in their communities, conducted local interviews, prepared and published firsthand reports online, and developed basic advocacy skills. 

At the close of the last training, participants wrote a collective statement describing their goals moving forward: “We are a group of women living in camps and communities who are fighting to have our voices heard and to share with the world the real situation of women in Haiti.”

Watch as KOVAVIV staff and other participants reflect on their experiences:

 

Learn More

 

Related Publications

What Haiti Needs from the U.S. and International Community

What Haiti Needs from the U.S. and International Community

Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Despite obvious distractions from crises in other corners of the world, Haiti’s deepening disaster is belatedly drawing wider international attention. Critics of U.S. policy toward Haiti are emerging from all corners of the political spectrum — and there is much to be critical of, particularly if the timeframe is stretched to cover Haiti's political experience since the late 1980s and the transition from the Duvalier dictatorships. But in the here and now, these assessments short charge the admittedly tough odds of the most recent Caribbean Community- (CARICOM) managed mediation efforts from which has emerged Haiti’s Presidential Council, a transitional governance structure for the country.

Type: Analysis

Democracy & GovernanceGlobal Policy

Ce qu'un gouvernement de transition en Haïti aura besoin pour réussir

Ce qu'un gouvernement de transition en Haïti aura besoin pour réussir

Thursday, March 28, 2024

Après des semaines de consultations, et au milieu d'une quasi-rupture totale de l'ordre et de la loi en Haïti, un effort dirigé par la Communauté caribéenne (CARICOM) pour créer un nouveau conseil de gouvernance de transition pourrait être sur le point d'être achevé. La mise en place du conseil permettrait l'entrée d'une force de sécurité multinationale qui pourrait ensuite se joindre à la police nationale haïtienne pour rétablir l'ordre. Certains ont suggéré l'inclusion de "facilitateurs" pour la nouvelle force de sécurité - soutien aérien, drones, renseignement. Mais pour gagner la confiance du peuple haïtien, le nouveau conseil de gouvernance aura besoin de ses propres "facilitateurs" populaires, d'un moyen systématique d'inclure de nombreux autres secteurs de la société haïtienne qui sont actuellement ignorés ou délibérément exclus de la gouvernance.

Type: Analysis

Global Policy

What a Transitional Government in Haiti will Require to Succeed

What a Transitional Government in Haiti will Require to Succeed

Thursday, March 28, 2024

After weeks of consultations, and amidst a near total breakdown of law and order in Haiti, a Caribbean Community (CARICOM)-led effort to create a new transitional governing council may be nearing completion. The council’s establishment would allow for the entry of a multinational security force that would then be able to join with the Haitian National Police and restore order. Some have suggested the inclusion of “enablers” for the new security force — air support, drones, intelligence. But to gain the trust of the Haitian people, the new governing council will need its own popular “enablers,” a systematic way to include many more sectors of Haitian society that are currently ignored or deliberately excluded from governance.

Type: Analysis

Global Policy

The Latest @ USIP: How Civil Society is Addressing Haiti’s Crisis

The Latest @ USIP: How Civil Society is Addressing Haiti’s Crisis

Monday, March 25, 2024

In the past few years, life in Haiti has been dominated by gangs’ growing control over huge swathes of the capital, Port-au-Prince. For Haitian families, this crisis has meant extreme violence, pervasive unemployment, lack of education for children and reduced access to health care. 2023 Women Building Peace Award finalist Dr. Marie-Marcelle Deschamps serves as the deputy executive director, the head of the women's health program and the manager of the clinical research unit of GHESKIO Centers in Port-au-Prince. She spoke to USIP about how her work helps women and their families, and what the global community can do to help Haitian civil society address this devastating humanitarian crisis.

Type: Blog

Conflict Analysis & PreventionGender

View All Publications