WOUGNET is located at Plot 55 Kenneth Dale, Off Kira Road, Kamwokya. Directions: After the Kamwokya market as you travel along Kira road, turn off to your left onto Kenneth Dale, (just before the football field and Kira Road Police Station). Once on Kenneth Dale, look out for the WOUGNET sign post on your left towards the end of the road. Click here for a map.
| March 2006: Advocacy Online - Designing electronic petitions |
|
|
|
|
At one time or another, you may have received an electronic petition - typically "chain-letter" style with a request to add your name to a list of names if you support the cause discussed in the email, to forward the request to as many as you can after appending your name, and to forward this email back to the organisers if you are at a certain position in the list. The good news and the bad news: Most email users have received their fair share of email petitions -- on topics ranging from the support of Afghan women's rights to ending the dolphin slaughter in Japan. These types of messages are frequently revealed as hoaxes or campaigns, but the question remains: why are email petitions such a bad thing in the first place? The E-Petition website explains why you shouldn't use, or forward, email petitions (ever!), and provides lots of great links that will legitimately support advocacy work online: http://www.e-petition.org Available at http://www.e-petition.org is the following: * examples of email petitions that did not work While the good examples listed at e-petition.org are web-based, you may sometimes need, or be constrained, to use email methods. Here is one way you can organise an email-based petition: 1. discuss/describe your cause and provide contact information for interested people to learn more In conclusion, e-petitions can be a quick and easy way to drawing attention to one's cause, however, it is important to understand how to make effective use of this strategy. |
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|