Dear global Wikimedia community,
As a follow up to Hisham's message, I would like to thank Hisham for his efforts in support of Wikimedia in India. He has been a great partner to the Wikimedia Foundation team and has worked tirelessly to build the India Program. He has worked in a challenging environment trying to do work in the Wikimedia movement that hasn’t been done before. While there have been ups and downs, our work in India has broken new ground for the movement and taught us all valuable lessons that we are applying in India and around the world. There is an unprecedented level of activity happening in India with promising programs that position the movement for continued growth.
Hisham also leaves behind an India Program that is working effectively with community members on a number of positive initiatives including community growth partnerships in several Indic languages, support for a new Malayalam education program, a GLAM partnership at the Crafts Museum, new wikiclubs at the British Council, ongoing efforts to leverage social media, and a dramatic increase in blog coverage of the India community’s work. There are also exciting developments on mobile that will be announced soon. This work will continue.
Hisham’s departure coincides with another change in the India Program. We are pleased to announce that the Wikimedia Foundation has approved a grant to the Centre for Internet and Society (CIS) in Bangalore to expand their Access to Knowledge programme to support the achievement of the Wikimedia mission in India. CIS is a leading organization in India working on Internet policy. They are part of the broad free and open community. CIS is a long time friend of Wikimedia, our community in Bangalore, and the Wikimedia India chapter.
CIS has committed to sustaining and building upon the work of the India Program. They plan to hire the existing program consultants as staff and will conduct a search for a new programme director. The program team will be based in Delhi. CIS will be sharing their program plans shortly and will want to incorporate community feedback.
The grant will be for two years in duration to complete the original first stage of the catalyst strategy. The first year’s grant will be for a total of INR 11,000,000 subject to final budget approvals. The second year will be for a similar amount plus inflation subject to a budget review in May 2013. The grant will be renewable via the Wikimedia Grants program (or the FDC, if CIS were to become an affiliated organization and meet eligibility).
This is a shift in how the Wikimedia Foundation seeks to support work in India. Rather than hire consultants or open an office of our own, we think it is preferable to work with an established institution that can bring valuable relationships and capabilities to support our movement. CIS will be a partner to the Wikimedia Foundation, but will operate autonomously in accordance with the terms of the grant agreement.
CIS will hire a programme director for the work. The recruitment process will draw on the best practices Wikimedia used in Brazil and incorporate active community participation in the process. They will share more info on this soon.
We have prepared an FAQ on Meta[1] and ask that questions or comments be posted there. I will endeavour to respond in a timely fashion, though I will be on a flight until 20:00 UTC tonight and will be in meetings in Dubai on Tuesday morning.
Finally, I'd like to wish Hisham all the best in his future endeavours. He has taken us through a critical first stage of our work in India and set us up for significant progress during the next stage. He will be missed and I hope he will stay a part of the Wikimedia community in India.
Best regards, Barry
[1] http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/India_Program/India_Program_Announcement_and_...
-- Barry Newstead Chief Global Development Officer Wikimedia Foundation
Dear Wikipedians,
On Mon, Jul 30, 2012 at 4:18 PM, Barry Newstead (WMF) bnewstead@wikimedia.org wrote:
Hisham’s departure coincides with another change in the India Program. We are pleased to announce that the Wikimedia Foundation has approved a grant to the Centre for Internet and Society (CIS) in Bangalore to expand their Access to Knowledge programme to support the achievement of the Wikimedia mission in India. CIS is a leading organization in India working on Internet policy. They are part of the broad free and open community. CIS is a long time friend of Wikimedia, our community in Bangalore, and the Wikimedia India chapter.
I would like to first like to thank Wikimedia Foundation for giving us a grant to expand our Access to Knowledge Programme with a greater focus on Wikipedia. I look forward to working with colleagues from the Foundation and serving the community in India.
A little bit about my self since I am posting for the first time on this list, I was elected an Ashoka fellow in 1999. I was part of the founding team of Mahiti.org though no longer formally involved. Between 2004 and 2007, I managed IOSN.net, a project of APDIP-UNDP that focussed on promoting FOSS, open standards and open content policies in the Asia-Pacific region. Apart from the Government of India, I have worked with the governments of Moldova, Tajikistan, Saudi Arabia and Iraq on free software and open standards policies. I currently serve on the boards of Samvada and Tactical Technology Collective and also on the sub-board of Open Society Foundation's Information Programme.
Now a little about CIS that is not in the FAQ. We are most often in the news for our work around Freedom of Expression under our Internet Governance programme. But most of our budget is spent on the other less controversial areas. As a research organisation CIS does not enforce party positions across staff members and fellows, like the Kamasutra we encourage a multiplicity of positions. CIS has hosted inclusiveplanet.com in the past and is currently hosting hasgeek.in. CIS's garage has been converted into a hacker space called The Lab. In the past, we have had the privilege to useful in small ways to individual Wikipedians, the Indian Wikipedia community and India chapter. The whole team looks forward to stepping-up that dramatically with this grant.
As a registered non-profit society, CIS will strive to maintain high levels of transparency and accountability to the Wikipedia community and the general public. We will make the budget and programme plan publicly available shortly. We will be transparent about staff remuneration and travel-related costs – as is the case with other CIS staffers. We will setup a recruitment panel for the Programme Director with hopefully participation from the community and the chapter as was the case in Brazil. More on that soon.
For now, if there are any questions for me regarding CIS and this particular grant – I would be happy to answer them.
Best wishes,
Sunil
Dear Barry,
Just a question .
What will happen to Wikimedia India Programme Trust[1] I Think it need to be answered in FAQ[2]. In my observation, the registration of a third entity , at a safe distance from Wikimedia Foundation and Chapter was a major organisational mistake in Wikimedia India programme . I like to see this question answered .
1. http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/FAQ_India_Programs/FAQ_Wikimedia_India_Progra... 2. http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/India_Program/India_Program_Announcement_and_...
~ Regards
Anivar
On 31 July 2012 21:26, Anivar Aravind anivar@movingrepublic.org wrote:
Dear Barry,
Just a question .
What will happen to Wikimedia India Programme Trust[1] I Think it need to be answered in FAQ[2]. In my observation, the registration of a third entity , at a safe distance from Wikimedia Foundation and Chapter was a major organisational mistake in Wikimedia India programme . I like to see this question answered .
True. And it pretty much went unanswered earlier as well.
I had once raised the issue here: http://lists.wikimedia.org/pipermail/wikimedia-l/2011-November/117059.html
Sadly, nobody concerned responded.
On 30 July 2012 16:18, Barry Newstead (WMF) bnewstead@wikimedia.org wrote:
As a follow up to Hisham's message, I would like to thank Hisham for his efforts in support of Wikimedia in India. He has been a great partner to the Wikimedia Foundation team and has worked tirelessly to build the India Program. He has worked in a challenging environment trying to do work in the Wikimedia movement that hasn’t been done before. While there have been ups and downs, our work in India has broken new ground for the movement and taught us all valuable lessons that we are applying in India and around the world. There is an unprecedented level of activity happening in India with promising programs that position the movement for continued growth.
[...]
CIS has committed to sustaining and building upon the work of the India Program. They plan to hire the existing program consultants as staff and will conduct a search for a new programme director. The program team will be based in Delhi. CIS will be sharing their program plans shortly and will want to incorporate community feedback.
Barry,
This is all quite unexpected, but bringing in CIS does really seem like a positive change at this moment for what has been happening in India.
Through CIS, Sunil has so far extended great support to volunteers in India, not only for those who were working as volunteers for Wikimedia but also for volunteers from free software movement, people working on freedom of expression and several other excellent causes. Having been part of the founding team of the chapter in India, I did feel that without Sunil's encouragement, support the chapter would have had more trouble taking shape given the complexities. So, it does feel like a good prospect going forward.
To be fair, the India programs has so far been an expensive project coming at a huge cost and not so great outcome. The big loser has been the chapter in India. Adding to that is the parity in work pressure as compared to the remuneration between volunteers who signed up to take up responsibilities at the chapter and the paid employees of the India program. Although I resigned from the chapter early last year, I still feel that much of the pressure has been on the few passionate volunteers who have been trying to put together a solid foundation for the chapter.
It is sad to see anyone go, but really does bring back memories when certain people in-charge weren't responding or were just 'too busy' to respond to calls from volunteers. However, that is past now and I'm no longer as active on Wikimedia projects as I used to be. However, there's still a sense of belonging that I'm pretty sure like me many other volunteers from India (who may have now gone inactive for a reason or the other) share - and are looking forward seeing the brighter side.
Cheers,
wikimedia-l@lists.wikimedia.org