Engaging Young People in the spaces where they are: an interview with Graham West, MP Minister for Youth, NSW Government, Australia

D. Cecez-Kecmanovic, M. Kennan, G. West
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Abstract

The New South Wales (NSW) Government in Australia has commenced an examination of the use of online social networking technologies to consult with young people and their communities. The primary area of interest has been the use of such technologies to enhance engagement with young people in NSW – mainly 9-18 years of age. This demographic is notoriously difficult to engage with in terms of government policies, social issues and civic matters. Young people do not generally react positively to messages being pushed at them, or offers to engage with government directly via well crafted web sites. Unless young people are already interested in politics and social matters, they tend to avoid such web sites. However, new Web 2.0 social networking technologies offer a different mode of engagement and new possibilities for social change. The massive upsurge in social networking sites has seen a new kind of social phenomenon emerge. This comprises a highly focused, self managed set of micro communities based around networks of " friends ". It reflects and amplifies the youth culture – close connections, instant messages, and high levels of feedback, intimate conversations and group interaction. MySpace, BeBo, Facebook, Friendster, Twitter and others are examples of accessible, open and instantaneous social technologies being taken up by millions of young people across Australia and across the world. Young people use the technologies to stay in touch
让年轻人参与他们所在的空间:采访澳大利亚新南威尔士州政府青年部长格雷厄姆·韦斯特
澳大利亚新南威尔士州(NSW)政府已开始审查使用在线社会网络技术与年轻人及其社区进行协商。主要关注的领域是利用这些技术加强与新南威尔士州年轻人(主要是9-18岁的年轻人)的接触。众所周知,在政府政策、社会问题和公民事务方面,这一人群很难接触。年轻人通常不会积极回应向他们推送的信息,或者通过精心设计的网站直接与政府接触的提议。除非年轻人已经对政治和社会问题感兴趣,否则他们往往会避开这类网站。然而,新的Web 2.0社会网络技术提供了一种不同的参与模式和社会变革的新可能性。随着社交网站的大量兴起,一种新的社会现象出现了。这包括一个高度集中的、自我管理的基于“朋友”网络的微社区。它反映并放大了青年文化——密切的联系、即时信息、高水平的反馈、亲密的对话和群体互动。MySpace、BeBo、Facebook、Friendster、Twitter等都是澳大利亚和世界各地数以百万计的年轻人使用的可访问、开放和即时社交技术的例子。年轻人使用这些技术来保持联系
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