skip to main content
10.1145/2998581.2998600acmotherconferencesArticle/Chapter ViewAbstractPublication PagesafrichiConference Proceedingsconference-collections
short-paper

Indigenous Knowledge for Wikipedia: A Case Study with an OvaHerero Community in Eastern Namibia

Published:21 November 2016Publication History

ABSTRACT

Wikipedia has established itself as the top content site on the World Wide Web and the largest and most successful general reference work. Its vision to provide access to the sum of all Human knowledge, however, is far from being realised. Through its Western focus, its strong alignment with existing encyclopaedias and its Internet-savvy editor base it has not even begun to penetrate knowledge that is not codified purely in writing. This paper presents preliminary results from an empirical experiment of oral information collection in rural Namibia converted into citations on Wikipedia. The intention was to collect information from an indigenous group which is currently not derivable from written material and thus remains unreported to Wikipedia under its present rules. We argue that a citation to an oral narrative lacks nothing that one to a written work would offer, that quality criteria like reliability and verifiability are easily comparable and ascertainable. On a practical level, extracting encyclopaedic like information from an indigenous narrator requires a certain amount of prior insight into the context and subject matter to ask the right questions. Further investigations are required to ensure an empirically sound approach to achieve that. We demonstrate that oral citations are possible and viable additions to Wikipedia as a global knowledge repository.

References

  1. Nicola J. Bidwell. 2016. Moving the Centre to Design Social. Media in Rural Africa. AI & Society: Journal of Culture, Communication & Knowledge, 31:51--77. Google ScholarGoogle ScholarDigital LibraryDigital Library
  2. Nicola J. Bidwell and Heike Winschiers-Theophilus. 2012. Extending. Connections between Land and People Digitally: Designing with Rural Herero Communities in Namibia. In, Heritage and Social Media: Understanding heritage in a participatory culture, Giaccardi, E.(ed), Routledge 197--216.Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
  3. Klaus Dierks. 1992. Introduction: From Stolen History to the Real Past. In Khauxanas.Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
  4. Peter Gallert. 2013. Indigenous Knowledge for Wikipedia -- Bending the Rules? Wikimania 2013.Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
  5. Peter Gallert. 2014. Workshop: Indigenous Knowledge for Wikipedia. In Proceedings of the 13th Participatory Design Conference: Short Papers, Industry Cases, Workshop Descriptions, Doctoral Consortium papers, and Keynote abstracts, volume 2, ACM, 199--200. Google ScholarGoogle ScholarDigital LibraryDigital Library
  6. Peter Gallert. and Maja van der Velden. 2015. The Sum of All Human Knowledge? Wikipedia and Indigenous Knowledge. In At the Intersection of Indigenous and Traditional Knowledge and Technology Design, Bidwell, N. and Winschiers-Theophilus, H.(eds.), Informing Science, 117--133Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
  7. Peter Gallert, Heike Winschiers-Theophilus, Gereon Kapuire, Colin Stanley. 2016. Clash of Cultures, Clash of Values: Wikipedia and Indigenous Communities, In Proceedings of the tenth International Conference on Culture, Technology, Communication. London, UK, 15-17 June 2016, 200-213Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
  8. Jim Giles. 2005. Internet encyclopaedias go head to head. Nature, 438:900--901.Google ScholarGoogle ScholarCross RefCross Ref
  9. Mark Graham. 2011. Wiki Space. Palimpsests and the Politics of Exclusion. In Critical Point of View. A Wikipedia Reader, Institute of Network Cultures, Amsterdam, Lovink, G. and Tkacz, N. (eds.), 268--282.Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
  10. Gereon Kapuire, Heike Winschiers-Theophilus, Edwin Blake, 2015. An insider perspective on community gains: A subjective account of a Namibian rural communities' perception of a long-term participatory design project. International Journal of Human-Computer Studies, 1--20 Google ScholarGoogle ScholarDigital LibraryDigital Library
  11. Ingo Koll. 2014. African language Wikipedias. Wiki-Indaba 2014.Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
  12. Piotr Konieczny. 2009. Governance, Organization, and Democracy on the Internet: The Iron Law and the Evolution of Wikipedia. Sociological Forum, 24(1):162--169.Google ScholarGoogle ScholarCross RefCross Ref
  13. Robin R. Miller. 2004. Wikimedia Founder Jimmy Wales Responds. Slashdot, (28).Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
  14. Mark Mushiba. 2014. Exploration of Value Sensitive-- Persuasive Technology Design for Wikipedia Adoption in Namibian Schools. Master thesis, Polytechnic of Namibia.Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
  15. Achal Prabhala. 2011. Oral Citations. Wikimedia Meta-- Wiki. Purcell, T. W. (1998). Indigenous knowledge and applied anthropology: Questions of definition and direction. Human Organization, 57(3).Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
  16. Trevor Purcell, 1998. Indigenous knowledge and applied anthropology: Questions of definition and direction. Human Organization, 57(3).Google ScholarGoogle Scholar
  17. Wikipedia authors (2014-2015). Oral citations experiment. Wikipedia.Google ScholarGoogle Scholar

Index Terms

  1. Indigenous Knowledge for Wikipedia: A Case Study with an OvaHerero Community in Eastern Namibia

    Recommendations

    Comments

    Login options

    Check if you have access through your login credentials or your institution to get full access on this article.

    Sign in
    • Published in

      cover image ACM Other conferences
      AfriCHI '16: Proceedings of the First African Conference on Human Computer Interaction
      November 2016
      279 pages
      ISBN:9781450348300
      DOI:10.1145/2998581

      Copyright © 2016 ACM

      Permission to make digital or hard copies of all or part of this work for personal or classroom use is granted without fee provided that copies are not made or distributed for profit or commercial advantage and that copies bear this notice and the full citation on the first page. Copyrights for components of this work owned by others than ACM must be honored. Abstracting with credit is permitted. To copy otherwise, or republish, to post on servers or to redistribute to lists, requires prior specific permission and/or a fee. Request permissions from [email protected]

      Publisher

      Association for Computing Machinery

      New York, NY, United States

      Publication History

      • Published: 21 November 2016

      Permissions

      Request permissions about this article.

      Request Permissions

      Check for updates

      Qualifiers

      • short-paper
      • Research
      • Refereed limited

    PDF Format

    View or Download as a PDF file.

    PDF

    eReader

    View online with eReader.

    eReader