Amnesty get all sarcastic about Shell

Amnesty continue to have a dig at Shell for their work in the Niger Delta with this new video and ad. The sarcasm that annoyed a couple of those who commented on the video is largely a parody of a Shell CSR ad (I guess much of the narrative is taken directly from one of the corporations public documents). I think it works OK. The pinch is the information holes this approach leaves. Compare with Ed Kashi and OSI’s work on the same issue.

This is the accompanying ad – directed at the Shell shareholders meeting. There is a direct public appeal to fund the ad – presented as ‘buying shares’ in the ad. Interesting fund raising concept.

Follow the money – Oxfam animation on oil revenues

Nice little animation from Oxfam (US) introducing their campaign ‘Right to Know, Right to Decide‘ looking at the lack of transparency in extractive industries.

Photography as Advocacy – a half century of oil and misery in the Niger Delta

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Open Society Institute Documentary Photography Project and Revenue Watch Institute hosted a panel discussion on oil in the Niger Delta and the use of photography in advocating for social change. Ed Kashi and Michael Watts discussed their new book Curse of the Black Gold: 50 Years of Oil in the Niger Delta.

Click here to listen – Photography as advocacy – a half century of oil and misery in the Niger Delta

Click here to view the excellent multi-media feature by Ed Kashi and Asume Isaac Osuoka. Would be great to see such work combined with Amnesty International’s campaign on this issue.

Thanks to duckrabbit for bringing this work to my attention.

‘Hell’ Stations

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Amnesty International UK campaign on their ‘Protect the Humanblog highlights the damage Shell is doing in the Niger Delta using Google Maps and photos.

Basically, the campaign asks people to visit their local Shell petrol station and take a photo obscuring the ‘S’ on the Shell signage (thus making ‘hell’).  Like this;

hell station_AIUK

Participants post the photo on a specially created Google Map here. You are then asked to go to any Shell petrol station on Google Maps and give it a bad (one star) review. You then inform AI UK of what you have done. After this it becomes less clear what happens next. I assume they will represent the response to Shell some how through some public forum, like the media.

Basically, it is a fancy on-line petition with a twist – the bad reviews adding an extra dimension of negative publicity. So, there is also an element of public protest, just taking place on-line. Rather than picket the stations  in reality people picket them on-line.

The action has been running since 21 August but despite receiving over 27,000 views to the ‘Hell Station‘ Google map this appears to have only translated into about 20 photos being posted – which for a petition is not very good. This begs the question of whether the action, though in many ways ”light touch‘ asks too much of people i.e. hunting down your local Shell station? The only comment on the map suggests that adding the photo and uploading the photos is ‘hard‘ so maybe that explains the low transference from interest to action.

I imagine this is not the first time Google Maps has been used in this way, and would be interested to see how successful other actions have been in generating participation?

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