Savannah Badalich

Revision as of 13:34, 13 March 2018 by Sbadalich (talk | contribs)

Savannah is a human rights advocate and digital strategist working at the intersection of human rights and technology, with a specific focus on safety, trust, and inclusion on Internet platforms. She is a program manager at Civic Hall and leads their civic accelerator program, CivicXcel. She also leads campaigns and develops programs focused on gender-based violence prevention and consults for various human rights organizations.[1]

Organization: Civic Hall
Affiliation: NextGen@ICANN
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Country: USA
Email: s.badalich@protonmail.com
LinkedIn:    Savannah Badalich
Twitter:    @sbadalich

She attends Columbia University’s graduate program in human rights focusing on how online platforms' features, content policies, and recommendation algorithms facilitate radicalization to white supremacy online. Savannah is a NextGen@ICANN61 member.[2]

Education & Research

Savannah attends Columbia University’s Institute on the Study of Human Rights MA program with a concentration on extremism, human rights, and the Internet. Her thesis research explores how online platforms' content features, content policies, and recommendation algorithms facilitate the radicalization of white women to white supremacy. Her study focuses on Youtube, reddit, and Twitter. Savannah was was one of fifteen participants selected as a NextGen@ICANN member to attend and presented her research at ICANN61 held in San Juan, Puerto Rico, from March 10th-15th, 2018.

Career History

She currently works as a program manager at Civic Hall – a collaborative community center and nonprofit dedicated to building technology for the public good and helping others do the same. Savannah leads the civic startup accelerator, CivicXcel, which provides civically minded professionals, activists, and entrepreneurs with hands-on training on using technology and design thinking to create a solution to a social issue.

Savannah also develops programs, leads campaigns, and delivers educational workshops focused on gender-based violence prevention. She previously worked as a program manager at Breakthrough, a human rights organization working to make gender-based violence culturally unacceptable through culture change. At Breakthrough, she managed the fellowship program, action incubator project, and digital organizing strategy. She continues to work with Breakthrough as a program consultant and curriculum developer on their activist incubator program.

She also consults for MasculinityU, a coalition of gender-based violence practitioners offering a national speakers bureau, curriculum development, advocacy and programmatic consulting, and guided facilitation. Savannah's focus areas are on sexual assault prevention, online harassment and violence education, community organizing, and LGBTQIA+ experiences and issues.

While at UCLA, she was at the forefront of the campus sexual assault movement and created a national sexual violence prevention organization – 7000 in Solidarity.[3] Her activism was featured on CNN, Aljazeera America, MSNBC, Associated Press, Washington Post, and VICE. She previously consulted universities, legislators, activist groups, California State Legislature, and the Obama White House.[4]

Arts

Savannah also utilizes pop culture and media in her advocacy and personal projects. She has activated communities to create change toward gender equity, gender-based violence prevention, online privacy rights, and queer rights issues through photo and video campaigns. Some of her photo campaigns include the Refinery29-featured campaign #LetsPictureConsent[5] on non-consensual photo sharing – otherwise known as revenge porn – and #AlcoholisNotConsent. Featured on BuzzFeed and CNN, the #AlcoholIsNotConsent photography campaign aimed to “change the ‘blame it on the alcohol’ mentality” as it regards to sexual assault.[6] Some other projects include #EndTheStigma Mental Health Campaign, Kids Should Be Kids, Consent Grams, Consent Is* Graphic Series, Man Up? Photography Series, and #ItsOnUsUCLA Photography Campaign


Savannah hosts a an Internet-only radio show called The Gay Agenda, which showcases queer artists, politics, and humor.

References