Project:Wikimedia Strategy 2017/Cycle 2/A Truly Global Movement



 Theme: A Truly Global Movement

The Wikimedia movement will turn our attention to the places in the world that were underserved during the first 15 years of our history. We will build awareness of Wikimedia and make it more useful to people. We will overcome barriers to accessing knowledge, so more people can freely share in the Wikimedia projects. We will support communities in underserved parts of the world and make space for new forms of contribution and citations that meet global knowledge traditions. By 2030, we will be a truly global movement.

Insights from the Wikimedia community (from first discussion)

 * Coming soon

Insights from partners and experts

 * Coming soon

New Readers generative research (2016)
Research was done in 2016 in three countries: India, Mexico, and Nigeria:

Five takeaways
 * 1) Awareness: as a brand, Wikipedia is not widely recognized or understood. People are Wikipedia readers without realizing it.
 * 2) Usage: Wikipedia readers are generally task-oriented, not exploration-oriented.
 * 3) Trust: Wikipedia’s content model can arouse suspicion. Despite this, there was no observed relationship between trust in and reading of Wikipedia.
 * 4) Affordability: Cost of mobile data remains a barrier to widespread internet penetration.
 * 5) Offline: People are increasingly getting information online, then consuming or sharing it offline.

Adoption of mainstream technology globally

 * 1) Euro Monitor: 53% of the world’s global population will be online by 2030: http://blog.euromonitor.com/2015/04/half-the-worlds-population-will-be-online-by-2030.html
 * 2) Cisco: For the first time, nearly everyone in the world will have a smartphone – with internet and a camera: http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/solutions/collateral/service-provider/visual-networking-index-vni/complete-white-paper-c11-481360.pdf
 * 3) Kleiner Perkins Caufield Beyer: Over 3B photos shared per day: http://www.kpcb.com/internet-trends

Population changes

 * 1) United Nations: Between 2015 and 2030, the vast majority of the world’s population growth will be in Africa (42%) and Asia (12%): https://esa.un.org/unpd/wpp/Download/Probabilistic/Population

Contribution of knowledge world-wide

 * 1) Annals of the Association of American Geographers: Much of the world’s digital knowledge is contributed by only part of the world. As more people come online, addressing representation will be even more urgent: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2382617
 * 2) Freedom House: 48 countries lack free, open internet: https://freedomhouse.org/report/freedom-net/freedom-net-2016

Building inclusive knowledge societies

 * 1) "Keystones to Foster Inclusive Knowledge Societies: Access to information and knowledge, freedom of expression, privacy, and ethics on a global internet," UNESCO: http://www.unesco.org/new/fileadmin/MULTIMEDIA/HQ/CI/CI/pdf/internet_draft_study.pdf
 * 2) "Recognizing Enablers of Inclusive Knowledge Societies," CIPESA (Promoting Effective and Inclusive ICT Policy in Africa): http://cipesa.org/2015/03/recognising-the-enablers-of-inclusive-knowledge-societies/
 * 3) Mozilla Internet Health Report / Section on digital inclusion: https://d20x8vt12bnfa2.cloudfront.net/InternetHealthReport_v01.pdf

Questions
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