Leaktivism

Leaktivism is defined as the action of distributing confidential documents to the public in an attempt to directly impact the socio-economic and political spheres. The term Leaktivism was popularized by Micah White, the co-founder of the Occupy movement, in relation to the Panama Papers.

Background of Leaktivism: The Panama Papers

The Panama Papers are a collection of 11.5m leaked files from one of the world's largest law firms, Mossack Fonseca.[1] A German newspaper called Süddeutsche Zeitung was able to obtain the database from an anonymous source. The different files demonstrated the manner in which the different wealthy individuals are able to take advantage of secrete offshore tax regimes.[1]

Twelve national leaders are included among the 143 politicians impacted within the leak.[1] The Russian president, Pakistan's prime minister, the former Vice-President of Iraq, the President of Ukraine, the father of the British Prime Minister, and the Prime Minister of Iceland are some of the politicians that were incriminated by the leak.

The information leaked in regards to the Panama Papers is considered one of the largest leaks in history. This leak is considered to be larger than both the US diplomatic cables distributed by WikiLeaks in 2010 and the secrete intelligence documents released by Edward Snowden in 2013.[1] In total there 11.5m documents along with 2.6 terabytes of information taken from the Mossack Fonseca’s internal database.[1]

Establishment of Leaktivism

Micah White is the co-founder of Occupy and a democratic activist. His article in the Guardian states that the Panama Papers illustrate the rising of leaktivism. He argues that the Panama Papers show that leaking information can be an impactful form of protest.[2] White argues that the leaks have the ability to destabilize numerous governments throughout the globe, impacting the credibility of powerful world leaders.[2]

White states that the Panama Papers have resulted in positive social change. He uses the example of the Prime Minister from Iceland, who was forced to resign from his position. However, he does argue that while the resignation of some corrupt political leaders is progress, it does not solve the larger problem; namely, that our world is being run by the top 1%.[2] He says that individuals must go beyond traditional activism and try different methods of protest, developing the manner in which our society protests in relation to the technology that is developing.

White concludes his article by stating that the main problem that the Panama Papers illustrates is a questions concerning the governance of our world. The leak demonstrates who is actually in power. He further argues that the distribution of the papers will only be successful if it bring upon change."[2]

See also

References

  1. Harding, Luke (2016-04-05). "What are the Panama Papers? A guide to history's biggest data leak". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2017-03-20.
  2. White, Micah; Occupy, co-founder of (2016-04-05). "The Panama Papers: leaktivism's coming of age". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2017-03-20.


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