Xigi ("ziggy") is a discovery platform, a place we are creating as a community we can all learn about the emerging capital market that invests private debt and equity in enterprises that create good for people and the planet. It's an interactive, searchable database for information about people, organizations and investment offerings in social enterprise, microfinance, housing, fair trade, cleantech, nonprofit facilities and many other sectors. Xigi is a nonprofit creative commons: a volunteer-driven resource by and for this emerging community.
Ashoka is the global association of the world’s leading social entrepreneurs—men and women with system changing solutions for the world’s most urgent social problems. Since 1981, Ashoka has elected over 1,800 leading social entrepreneurs as Ashoka Fellows, providing them with living stipends, professional support, and access to a global network of peers in more than 60 countries.
In late 2005, the dotOrganize team embarked on an unprecedented effort to map the current state of online technology in the social change sector. Over nine months, dotOrganize gathered survey and interview input from more than 400 social change groups, technology providers, and nonprofit technology capacity builders. Surveys and interviews were designed to identify what organizers need to support their goals, what tools are currently available, what does and does not work, and what's needed to strengthen the long-term capacity of the sector.
Great effort was made to obtain input from organizations with smaller budgets: 75% of organizations surveyed operate on annual budgets of $1 million or less; 29% on budgets under $100,000.
The full report provides a detailed view of the sector's present situation, gives voice to the organizers who are struggling with these issues, and offers recommendations for filling current gaps in strategy, software development, and tool adoption paths.
Web2.0 is a term used loosly to describe a set of technologies, and their usage patterns, which shift the focus of user activity on the web from consumption to participation.
Strategies of online moderation
This is a space for studying strategies of moderation in groups that conduct some or all of their communications online. The principal content of this wiki is a proposed "pattern language" -- a description of the common patterns of these moderation systems -- for developers to consider when deploying or altering social software.
S. Warburton, and Y. Mor. EuroPLoP'22: 27th European Conference on Pattern Languages of Programs, New York, NY, United States, Association for Computing Machinery, (2022)
S. Chua, C. Tagg, M. Sharples, and B. Rienties. Workshop at the 7th International Learning Analytics and Knowledge Conference. Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, Canada, 13-17 March 2017, page 36-62. (2017)