Digital Civil Society: Challenges & Opportunties, with Lucy Bernholz

In this episode we talk to Lucy Bernholz, Director of the Digital Civil Society Lab at Stanford University’s Center on Philanthropy & Civil Society (Stanford PACS) about how technology is reshaping civil society and the challenges and opportunities this will bring. Including:   Digital civil society Is there any meaningful distinction between “civil society” and “digital civil society” now? Has the current period of enforced digitisation as a consequence of the COVID pandemic led to more CSOs engaging with tech and tech issues? What dangers are there for CSOs in assuming that platforms are objective or neutral public spaces? Are these problems likely to be exacerbated by the enforced pivot to digital for so many orgs as a result of COVID? Are funders (e.g. foundations) getting to grips with the challenges and opportunities of the fourth industrial revolution? Influencing the wider development & implementation of tech Can nonprofits play a meaningful role in ensuring that tech is designed and implemented ethically? Does the focus on “ethical” approaches to tech risk diverting attention from the need for more traditional mechanisms of legislation and regulation? Are the inherent power imbalances between CSOs and tech companies too great for the latter to influence the former, or can asymmetric methods be used to overcome them? What role can foundations and funders play in helping nonprofits engage with technological change? Trust & Accountability DO CSOs face new challenges to their authenticity in a digital world (deepfakes, astroturfing etc)? Will perverse incentives within the online attention economy present a particular challenge for CSOs when it comes to maintaining trust? Do we need to make philanthropy more democratic, or accountable to the people and communities it is supposed to serve? If so, how? Social movements & new forms of organising If digital tools enable people to form groups easily and organise in different ways, does this make traditional nonprofits less relevant as people look to networked models of social change? What is the major appeal of networked movements? Do people believe they are more effective, or is it more about their ability to democratize participation and offer more active modes of engagement? How can traditional nonprofits embrace some of the benefits of networked or decentralized approaches? Does this require a major change of structure, or just mindset? Do the affordances of technology genuinely overcome the known weaknesses of structureless, leaderless or non-hierarchical organisational models, or will we simply end up rediscovering some of these weaknesses in the digital context? Data & Automation Could CSOs take a lead on modelling ethical approaches to the collection, storage and usage of data? Or is this too far out of their hands? Is AI is a big deal for nonprofits? If so, why? As the internet shifts from being something we access via specific interfaces to a universal digital substrate all around us (via the growth of IoT, edge computing etc), what new opportunities and challenges might this create for CSOs? Predictions and Foresight in civil society: What role can historical insight play in shaping our thinking about the future of civil society? How can we get more foresight and futures thinking embedded in civil society? What role could foundations and funders play? Should CSOs be seen as a valuable source of potential knowledge and insight to guide wider attempts by governments and others to identify future trends and scenarios?   Related Content: Stanford Digital Civil Society Lab The Digital Impact blog Stanford PACS Lucy’s own blog, “Philanthropy 2173” Lucy’s recent 5-part Chronicle of Philanthropy series on “Reimagining Philanthropy” Blueprint (Lucy’s series of annual predictions for civil society) Rhodri’s Alliance piece on “The Ethics of Platform Philanthropy” CAF Giving Thought’s work on “the future of doing good” CAF Giving Thought discussion paper “Networking Opportunities? Rediscovering decentralisation in philanthropy & civil society” Rhodri’s piece for Digital Impact, “When Nobody Knows You’re a Dog: Tech, Civil Society, and the Fight for Authenticity”

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Charities Aid Foundation's Giving Thought podcast explored the big issues, themes and news stories relating to philanthropy and the work of civil society. This podcast is no longer produced.