Promoting Communication for Social Change
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Number 241, Febrary 2002

 
  

This issue of Action / Media Action is still being rebuilt. This may take a few days. If you urgently require information from a previous issue please contact Sean Hawkey , who is editor of Media Action and Web Manager and he will be glad to email you a particular article on request. Media Action is no longer being printed and is only available online. You can subscribe to WACC’s newsletter which is a low-volume list of links to new articles appearing on the website by using the subscribe form , this is a free service. You may also sign up for WACC’s newsletter from the Affiliation form , which is free too. For any other enquiries regarding publications or WACC services please use the contact form and refer to the staff list . Thankyou.

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Radios for Guns

4 abr 2005

To a person in Niger, does a radio that does not require batteries mean more than a gun? The Freeplay Foundation is betting that it will.

OneWorld, www.oneworld.net, is developing its use of video on the Internet -in the belief that it represents a powerful and largely unrealised tool to raise the impact of organisations working on human rights and sustainable development.

The Global Communicators Network meeting was hosted by RDRS in January in Rangpur, Bangladesh and included a series of workshops and presentations on communication about HIV/AIDS, Trade and Economic Justice, Emergencies and Disasters.

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Regional News

4 abr 2005

Bangladesh

Md Jahangir. Photo: Sean Hawkey 
  

Md Jahangir

Muhammed Jahangir, director of the Centre for Development Communication and popular media columnist, is setting up the Media Consumers Forum. The forum will discuss all issues that affect media consumers and Jahangir expects the group to interact with broadcasters, publishers and advertisers as advocates for improvements in services. Monthly meetings and a bulletin are in the pipeline. CDC have produced many valuable TV spots on social issues and recently ran a workshop supported by WACC

contact: cdc@bdonline.com

Campaign for “Communication Rights in the Information Society” (CRIS)

Our vision of the “Information Society” is grounded in the Right to Communicate, as a means to enhance human rights and to strengthen the social, economic and cultural lives of people and communities.

An “ecology of communication” in order to confront the contamination of the media by globalising powers was called for by the editor of Le Monde Diplomatique Ignacio Ramonet. The French journalist was one of several panellists at the conference ‘Democratising Communications and the Media’. The conference was part of the II World Social Forum, held in Porto Alegre, Brazil, between 31 January and 5 February 2002 and was one among several seminars and workshops which looked at communication issues during the forum.

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A Kairos Chapter

4 abr 2005

Rev Randy Naylor remembers three great communicators and friends

Jan Kok had been ill for some time, fighting against the cancer consuming his body, and recently we knew that he could not live long in our world. Yet news of his death on February the 8th still arrived as that inevitable cold shock. A friend, publisher, and ecumenical leader had died, too young, at 59. Thirty of those years had been as a communication staff person with the World Council of Churches.

Sean Hawkey

The pre-industrial setting of rural Bangladesh is the location of a high-tech enterprise tipped as a model for communication and poverty reduction for the entire Third World. To see it for myself I followed barefoot guides to a few of the 9,400 villages where Grameen Telecom have set up business with mobile phones, and to question if they can really make any difference to the rural poor. As I walked along a network of muddy paths, looking around at people bent double in paddy fields, I couldn’t help thinking that mobile phones, if they’re not a ridiculous idea, must be very low down the list of priorities in poor rural villages.

WACC promotes communication for social change. It believes that communication is a basic human right that defines people's common humanity, strengthens cultures, enables participation, creates community and challenges tyranny and oppression.

The World Association for Christian Communication (WACC) is a UK Registered Charity (number 296073) and a Company registered in England and Wales (number 2082273) with its Registered Office at 36 Causton Street, London SW1P 4ST. It is incorporated in Canada as a not-for-profit organisation with its head office at 308 Main Street, Toronto ON, M4C 4X7.