The Real eHarmony FEATURE

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2/19/2014                                                                  The Real eHarmony

FEATURE
The Real eHarmony
How young people meeting on the Internet might
help build peace in some of the world's most volatile
regions.
BY S H ELDON H IMELFARB

W
                   hen 2013 began, there was still smoldering controversy over the
                   Innocence of Muslims movie "trailer" that had gone viral, sparking
riots across the Middle East that left 50 dead and reportedly fueling the attack
on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi. A year prior, an attack on a United
Nations compound in Afghanistan that left at least 12 dead was spurred by the
pastor of a tiny church in Gainesville, Fla., who publicized his planned Quran
burning online. The Internet, it appeared, was proving its power to amplify a
few lone, offending voices from one corner of the world enough to spark
violence thousands of miles away. Then, halfway through 2013, after the
Boston Marathon bombing, we witnessed another brand of online hysteria, as
users flocked to Reddit and Twitter to try to identify the bombers, prompting
an apology from Reddit for what it called "online witch hunts and dangerous
speculation."
In its 2013 Global Risks report, the World Economic Forum described these
sorts of threats as "digital wildfires." "The Internet remains an uncharted, fast-
evolving territory," with the power to "enable the rapid viral spread of

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2/19/2014                                                                  The Real eHarmony

information that is either intentionally or unintentionally misleading or
provocative, with serious consequences. The chances of this happening are
exponentially greater today," it said.
But as much as such incidents have evinced the violent power of the viral, last
year also saw the emergence of a potential antidote: the exponential growth of
"virtual exchanges" -- sustained, people-to-people educational programs that
are carefully facilitated by trained staff and enabled by the explosion of
connectivity. A concept invented 30 years ago, virtual exchanges offer the
promise of a scalable, cost-effective way of allowing people to connect with
each other across geographic and cultural boundaries. They've only just
begun to take off in a real way -- but new research out of the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT) has shown that their impact could be massive.
As the reality of international conflict demands that we think anew about
whose hearts and minds we need to reach most -- and how we can do it --
virtual exchanges have shown the promise of succeeding where conventional
programs can't reach. Traditional exchanges like study abroad offer sparse
access to countries struggling with violent extremism, where bulging youth
populations are especially vulnerable. The most popular destination for U.S.
students studying abroad is Europe -- about 53 percent right now, according to
the Institute of International Education (IIE). Except for Israel, not one nation
in the Middle East or North Africa -- where the need for deeper understanding
is great -- makes the Top 25 list of host countries. In fact, the number of
students heading for the Middle East or North Africa actually dropped 3.6
percent between the 2010/2011 and 2011/2012 school years, according to IIE.
Volatility is surely a disincentive for some prospective students, but the other
great barrier is cost: Study abroad has become incredibly expensive. The most
modestly priced program costs about $4,000, and many run 10 times that

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2/19/2014                                                                  The Real eHarmony

amount, especially when the costs of travel and room and board are taken into
account. No wonder, then, that only 1.4 percent of American college and
university students will travel overseas on an exchange program.
Meanwhile, Internet access has grown by orders of magnitude across the
Middle East and Africa. From 2000 to 2012, Internet penetration grew 3,600
percent in the Middle East and more than 2,400 percent in Africa. In Pakistan
-- currently one of the most important counties to U.S. foreign policy --
Internet access doubled between 2009 and 2012, reaching 30 million people in
a country of 180 million.
In short, we have significant new and less costly opportunities than study
abroad to reach across cultural and religious divides -- opportunities that are
evolving rapidly with the growth in new media technologies and platforms.
Smart young leaders in the virtual-exchange movement from organizations
like Global Nomads Group (GNG), Soliya, and IEarn.org have formed a
partnership called the Exchange 2.0 Coalition, which is trying to give more and
more young people the opportunity to have a meaningful cross-cultural
experience. The organizations in the coalition have different formats and
different target audiences. Some, like Soliya, bring university students from
the United States and Muslim countries into small, seminar-like discussions;
others, like IEarn and GNG, are more classroom-to-classroom. But nearly all of
them emphasize careful facilitation and sustained contact between
participants over time. They also rely on live interactive videoconferencing
using low-cost, readily available technology, supplemented by some
customization for their particular organization's needs. And often, they will
also use social networking, gaming, and new media tools like sharing personal
videos to create additional opportunities for communication and
collaboration.

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2/19/2014                                                                  The Real eHarmony

What the Exchange 2.0 Coalition also represents is a strong emphasis on solid
research that includes a way to test whether programs like this might help
mitigate conflict. The coalition has partnered with MIT's Saxe Lab for Social
Cognitive Neuroscience to develop tools to assess the impact of virtual
exchange programs, recognizing that there are many skeptics asking how a
long distance computer-based interaction can truly affect attitudes.
That partnership is bearing fruit. Early in 2014, a first-of-its kind study will be
released that looks at the reaction of university students to the Boston
Marathon bombing. As noted earlier, one of the lessons that resounded after
the attack was that Americans could be just as prone to an Internet-inspired
lynch mob mentality as anyone else. But what the MIT study shows is that
those American undergraduates who participated in a Soliya-run virtual
exchange program with students from universities in Muslim countries
reacted in profoundly encouraging ways compared with others who were not
in the program. A preliminary statement describing the findings claimed:
"Results were very promising showing that participation in virtual exchange
programs, such as the (Soliya) Connect Program, enabled American students
not to generalize the negative actions of two Muslim individuals (the Tsarnaev
brothers) on Muslims as a whole. They showed either similar attitudes
towards this group as before participation (in the Connect program), or
improved perceptions after their participation, compared to the control group
students whose attitudes towards Muslims overall deteriorated, and the
results were statistically significant."

Does this mean online dialogues alone can prevent future tragedies like the
Boston bombing and the digital mob that arose in its wake, or the violent
reaction to the Innocence of Muslims? Of course not. But these are
unprecedented times of technological innovation and skyrocketing media
consumption, where young people between 8 and 18 years old in America

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2/19/2014                                                                  The Real eHarmony

spend almost eight hours a day with electronic media (and by multi-tasking,
manage to consume almost 11 hours of content in that time); international
youth are not far behind. These virtual exchanges may represent an effective
and even measurable strategy for cultivating a culture of mutual
understanding and non-violent conflict resolution among these future
generations.
The really big news is that governments are recognizing this enormous
potential and beginning to step up their commitments to virtual exchanges. In
May, at the Foreign Service Institute, Secretary of State John Kerry unveiled
the Obama administration's plan to develop -- in close cooperation with the
family of deceased U.S. Ambassador to Libya J. Christopher Stevens -- a major
new public-private virtual exchange initiative. "We believe," Kerry announced,
"this can lead to the largest-ever increase in people-to-people exchanges
between the United States and the Middle East and North Africa. We believe it
will dramatically increase the number and diversity of young people who have
a meaningful cross-cultural experience -- the same experiences Chris knew
were so important."
The surging growth of the online world has shown that it can quickly transmit
volatility and disruption, sparking offline violence. What the success of these
virtual exchanges proves is that there is a reciprocal potential for
peacebuilding that might be just as powerful.
Spencer Platt/Getty Images

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