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Voices of Change: Strategic Radio Support for Achieving the Millennium Development GoalsAuthorAndrew Skuse
School of Social Science, University of Adelaide Publication DateJanuary 15, 2006
Summary"This paper asserts that information and communication are located at the very core of poverty alleviation processes, from processes of community participation and empowerment, to raising broad awareness of public health issues, to providing humanitarian information during times of conflict, to promoting good governance and accountability, to complex debt relief processes or the promotion of the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)." Published by the Information and Communication for Development (ICD) team of the United Kingdom (UK)'s Department for International Development (DFID), this 32-page paper provides a summary of the scope of radio's involvement - and its potential and actual impact - in fulfilling the broader goals and targets of the United Nations Millennium Declaration. While acknowledging that a rich variety of ICD initiatives have used diverse tools - such as face-to-face or interpersonal communication, community-level communication (e.g., theatre or role-playing), mass-mediated communication, computer-based modes of information retrieval and exchange, and telecommunications via land line or mobile channels - to support achievement of the MDGs, this paper focuses explicitly on radio, which "constitutes a communications mainstay for millions of poor people in the South." To begin, the document explores the ways in which radio can play - and has played - a role in raising public awareness and support for the MDGs, which the author suggests is "critical to their achievement". Additional chapters detail how radio has been used in specific contexts and ways around the world to sustain livelihoods (agriculture and enterprise), help people claim a voice and be heard (human rights and equality), support better health and education, and prevent/mitigate conflict and natural disasters. The paper's core premise is that ICD initiatives are central to upholding the rights of economically poor people to receive and share information - and thus lie at the core of poverty reduction efforts. A key purpose of this paper is on the role of overseas development aid (ODA) in sustaining and supporting radio-based communication initiatives. To that end, throughout his review of the "broad range of radio-based sectoral activity undertaken in support of...the MDGs", the author offers specific suggestions for the DFID in sustaining and supporting radio as a communication tool to address poverty and other development issues around the world. For instance:
In conclusion, the author suggests that "technological and informational empowerment underpins the ability of poor communities to realise their own voice. Therefore, access to radio and support for the development of useful and useable content remains critical. When combined, these two capacity building thrusts can help poor people realise a voice, and realising a voice has long been identified as fundamental to effective community participation in development." ContactDepartment for International Development (DFID)
1 Palace Street
London
SW1E 5HE
United Kingdom (UK)
Tel: 0845 300 4100 (UK only) OR 44 (0) 1355 84 3132
Fax: 44 (0) 1355 84 3632
SourceDFID website and email from DFID, August 20 2009. Placed on the Communication Initiative site September 14 2006 Last Updated August 25 2009 How useful did you find the knowledge and contacts on this page to your work? Post your comments (review comments from others below):COMMENTS POSTEDTop 5 Related Pages for this Summary |
Special FocusNewspapers and Democracy
How central to democracy are newspapers - some of which are being lost to budget cuts and other changes - as opposed to blogs, YouTube, emails, text messaging, twittering, and the like?
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Dear Mr.Andrews,
I have to give a lecture on radio as a communication tool for the communities . I am a Producer of Radio Program. This paper is very usseful to me. Thank u
I am to deliver a lecture on Community radio. find very useful
Josephine
impressions_joseph@hotmail.com