Let me start by saying a big CONGRATULATION to all the
winners of Spaces for Change’s Social Media Foursquare Awards. We are
very excited that this competition and the resulting awards have been so
successful in its first year, deepening camaraderie and the bonds of solidarity
among 5,708 members of Spaces for Change’s online platforms.
Spaces for Change’s Discussion Forum is particularly
famed for its e-conferences, leveraging new media technology and crowd-sourcing
tools to promote public awareness and facilitate citizen engagement in policy
and public decision-making processes. Both the administrators
and members of the group capitalize on S4C’s strong online presence to promote citizen engagement in the democratic process, mainly using
moderated group discussions and web seminars to interrogate policy proposals, official decisions and development programs with a view to enhancing public
governance policing, social innovation and to restore inclusive economic growth.
In general, the four categories of the Social
Media Foursquare Awards (SMFA) aims to recognize and celebrate members who
invested enormous energy and commitment to issues of democratic accountability,
social justice and youth development in Nigeria. More specifically, SMFA
is our own way of thanking all our members for their unalloyed loyalty and
support to Spaces for Change since its establishment in May 2011, including the
various roles they played towards upscaling the organization’s ethical culture
and performance in 2013. The award winners are no doubt, trailblazers of social change in Nigeria.
The winners are:
The Conversation of the
Year: Chinedu Akwuobi popularly known Chinedu Chiefsan started a conversation
in June 2013 interrogating the popular statistical myth which claims that more
than 70% of Nigerians live on less than $1 per day. That conversation which
lasted for more than a month provoked intense intellectual debate and academic engagement
on the validity of this claim, generating almost a thousand commentaries by a
broad spectrum of young professionals and experts in the field of economics,
oil and gas, law, medicine, education, geophysics, development, journalism, engineering,
urban planning, including Nigerians students in institutions of higher learning
across the world.
See link to the full discussion here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/spacesforchange/permalink/472423429506094/
Chinedu Chiefsan is a 300-level student in the Department of Education Economics, Imo
State University Owerri, Imo State. Besides schooling, he works as a financial
analyst with over 7 years of active participation in the Nigerian capital market.
He has started a hedge fund startup based in Owerri, Imo State.
Group
Influencer of the Year: This award given to Pamela Braide recognizes
the most outstanding personality in the group whose contributions regularly
radiates profound intellectual energy, topical versatility and strong potential
to educate and influence the group’s policy discussions and recommendations.
Pamela
Braide is a development and communications consultant with roots in
entertainment spanning over 20 years experience in working with government at all
levels, civil society, private companies and individuals. Pamela is an architect
who diverted to a communications career as an illustrator of health campaign
IEC materials and entertainment promotion and moved further to the field of
participatory communication methodologies, behavioural change communications,
public relations, online engagement and reputation management. Her civil
society engagement is largely focused on project delivery and policy advocacy
on issues which intersect with gender, leadership, human rights, youth employment,
and issue-based coalition building, sustenance and awareness creation via
online and offline engagement. Pamela is also a singer and writer passionate
about societal issues. Her hobbies include history, literature and pop culture.
The
Most Civil Debater: Kelechi Deca received this award for consistently
maintaining high level of civility and decorum in his online interactions and
engagement with members of the group. He is a multilingual journalist with over
17 years experience with bias in development journalism. Since year 2000, he
has consistently covered organizations such as the UN, the International
Monetary Fund (IMF)/World Bank, African Union (AU) and African Development Bank
(ADB). He was the editor of African Economy magazine and Banking & Finance
in Africa for 8 years. Presently, he is the Group Managing Editor, National
Standard Magazine and The National Daily newspapers. He also runs Deca Media, a
media consultancy outfit.
He attended the University
of Nigeria where he studied Foreign Languages and Literatures. He has over the
years attended various professional training within and outside Nigeria. He has
traveled to 69 countries in the course of his duties. He has researched
extensively on culturenomics, how culture influences business attitude. He is
married and blessed with four sons.
The
Most Active Discussant: We celebrate Adesoji Adebisi in
recognition of his strongest and consistent presence in most of the group
discussions and debates in Spaces for Change and S4C Political Forum. Adesoji Adebisi was born and brought up in Kaduna. He attended Army
Children School, 1 Division Artillery Kakuri Kaduna (1982),G.D.S S, Kakuri
Kaduna (1988) and Ladoke Akintola University of Technology (LAUTECH) Ogbomoso,
Nigeria (1998). He is a tutor in his spare time and is particularly interested
in making sure the experience of want (academically) is not passed onto the
coming generation by advocating for a robust system that would give every
Nigerian child a shot at living well and aspiring to thriving well. Poetry,
reading, writing, cycling and do-it-yourself are some of his hobbies.
We celebrate your victory and commitment to peace,
democratic accountability, and justice using your voices, skills and
connections on the social media to impart ideas and propose creative solutions
to some of the present difficulties facing our country Nigeria.
We thank you for the enormous energy you invest in a
wide range of online conversations and web-based activities in S4C’s Discussion
Forum on Facebook, Twitter (@spaces4change) and on the Google Blog- http://www.spacesforchange.blogspot.com/.
Spaces for Change is even more determined to work towards
creating more innovative ways that will allow our young professionals to engage
social and economic governance processes, in the belief that small online encounters
have the power to spark curiosity and create offline actions that lead to sustainable
change.
Thank you
Victoria Ohaeri
Executive
Director
SPACES
FOR CHANGE
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