Women listening to the radio in Bangladesh
From JHU/CCP

Communication for Change in a Globalized World

"Those who have the mass media in their hands ... bear responsibility for the world and for the future of humanity. Just as the splitting of the atom can immensely enrich humanity in a thousand and one ways and, at the same time, can also threaten it with destruction, so television can have both good and evil consequences. Quickly, suggestively, and to an unprecedented degree, it can disseminate the spirit of understanding, humanity, human solidarity and spirituality, or it can stupefy whole nations and continents. And just as our use of atomic energy depends solely on our sense of responsibility, so the proper use of television depends on our sense of responsibility as well."
—Vaclav Havel (Sunrise Magazine, 1995)

The waves of privatization and pressures toward liberalized trade that have marked the world economic order at the turn of the 21st century have also shaped the world media order. But the media industry is not only affected by these trends, it is also a potential instrument to combat the poverty and inequity that continue to plague so many of the world's people. Mass media can be the ideological army in support of globalization, but can also become the grassroots weapons to fight its impact.

As coalitions and activists around the world demand that sustainable development become a priority in the world's changing political and economic systems, many civil-society advocates are urging the use of mass media to help communities find local solutions to economic, political and social disempowerment. From town meetings via community television in rural Newfoundland to cultural rituals documented by indigenous people in Brazil to radio programs teaching ecological agriculture in Kenya and anti-pollution in Nepal, MediaChannel affiliates are helping to create communication for change.

Much attention on media development these days focuses on bridging what's come to be known as the Digital Divide and on deploying new information and communication technologies, or ICT. Certainly, it is critical that all people, especially the poor, are given the full opportunities of the digital age (see OneWorld's special report on the Digital Divide), but old-fashioned television and radio still have a far greater reach and saturation across the world than computers and the Net. As we continue to push for ways to adopt ICT for democracy and development, we must continue to support broadcasting by and for the people.

Below, MediaChannel affiliates explore the threats and opportunities of broadcasting in a globalized world and describe projects that serve as models and inspiration.

— Aliza Dichter ( liza@mediachannel.org) and Murad Rayani ( murad@mediachannel.org), editors.

Ideas and Issues  |  Case Studies


IDEAS AND ISSUES
Communication For Social Change
As NGOs seek to "create locally based solutions to critical social ills," they too often overlook the powerful role communication can play in their efforts. This 1999 position paper from the U.S.-based Rockefeller Foundation warns that in the current hyper-commercialized media landscape, development groups must redouble their efforts to help "shape communication environments that can work for people, not against them." From DevMedia
Mass Media Versus The People
The global media, dominated by corporate interests from a handful of powerful countries in the North, serve to sustain and amplify economic inequity and are a force against development, writes Dr. Nawal El Saadawi: "Through control of the mass media you create the conditions for conformity to the global market and limit the possibility of effective resistance to it." From The Media Channel, October 25 2000 More about: Egypt, Africa, Access, Advertising/Commerce, Audience, Cultural Impacts, Diversity, Freedom of Expression, Politics, Radio, Television
The Power Of Television
The old European dichotomy between commercial and public broadcasting is dissolving, forecast WETV founder Dr. David Nostbakken in 1998. In this speech to the conference on "The E.U. Enlargement and the role of NGOs," Nostbakken urged that NGOs form Affiliateships with broadcasters to produce a critical mass of civil-society programming and push for policies to ensure pluralistic and democratic media. From OneWorld Austria, October 18 1998 More about: Europe, Eastern Europe, Access, Audience, Cultural Impacts, Diversity, Public Broadcasting, Television
Cultural Globalization Down Under
The liberalization of world trade together with the growing transnational media conglomerates present an increasing threat to cultural diversity, both locally and globally, reports Gareth Grainger of the Australian Broadcasting Authority. Regulatory intervention, as well as strong support and funding for local independent production, is vital to resisting these trends. From Audio Visual Forum, May 1 2000 More about: Australia, Asia and the Pacific, Oceania, Audience, Cultural Impacts, Diversity, Policy/Law, Film, Music, Television
CASE STUDIES
Here are just a few examples of how MediaChannel affiliates are using radio and television for development and social change. News and reports from recent projects around the world, as well as extensive support and strategic resources for development communication work can be found at The Communication Initiative, www.comminit.com
Across India, Via Satellite
In India projects that place direct-reception television sets in remote rural areas work to ensure that satellite broadcasting does not result in an information underclass. But the cultural dislocation brought about by commercialism is proving harder to tackle. From ORBICOM: The International Network of UNESCO, December 1 2000 More about: India, South East Asia, Access, Advertising/Commerce, Audience, Cultural Impacts, Policy/Law
Senegal's Youth Radio
"Bla-Bla," a political satire, and "Fadiou Thiossane," a program on traditional healing, are two shows broadcast on Oxy-Jeunes, a community radio station run by young people in Dakar, Senegal. Unfortunately, despite tremendous popularity, financial constraints raise doubts over the sustainability of such community-based projects. From The UNESCO Courier, February 1 2000 More about: Senegal, Africa, West Africa, Access, Activism, Audience, Cultural Impacts, Diversity, Radio
Video for The Voiceless
The use of video by indigenous Brazilian groups provides not only a potent tool for cultural revitalization but also demonstrates the Amazonian Indians' profound understanding of media analysis and its communicative and political power, reports Patricia Aufderheide in this scholarly piece. From The Media Channel, March 13 2000 More about: Brazil, South America, Cultural Impacts, Diversity, Media Arts
Facts Of Life In Africa
The multilingual audio programs produced by Radio Bridge Overseas in Zimbabwe include stories to foster cross-cultural connections between African countries and their former colonizers, as well as practical information, like how to tan leather or cook with sorghum. From Radio Bridge Overseas Trust, More about: Africa, Audience, Cultural Impacts, Diversity, Media Arts, Radio
Town Meetings And Interactive TV
With youth behind the camera and call-in TV programs engaging the public, Fred Campbell's grassroots communication projects in rural Newfoundland, Canada, show that locally controlled media can help communities in the North address their issues, too. From In Motion Magazine, August 15 2000 More about: Canada, United States, North America, Activism, Audience, Children, Cultural Impacts, Diversity, Television
Airwaves Of Peace In Cambodia
Cambodian media, like Cambodian politics, remain fractious. Radio's capacity to reach a wide audience, often via loudspeakers in town centers, is being used in this Canadian-sponsored program to help create media for peacemaking. From Institute for Media, Policy and Civil Society, August 30 2000 More about: Cambodia, Asia and the Pacific, East Asia, Activism, Audience, Cultural Impacts, Radio
Public Service On Air In Nepal
By 1999 the Nepalese government was slowly relinquishing its monopoly over the country's media. Radio Sagarmatha, with its air-quality campaign, traditional folk music and daily listener-feedback segments, set the tone for other FM stations. From World Assoc. for Christian Comm., April 1 1999 More about: Nepal, Asia and the Pacific, South Asia, Access, Activism, Audience, Cultural Impacts, Diversity, Radio
Feminist Broadcasting In Indonesia
A weekly taboo-breaking program is taking on serious social issues for girls and women across Indonesia. The show's only detractors may be men whose wives are beginning to question their own feminine roles. From Internews Network, Inc., January 1 2000 More about: Indonesia, Activism, Audience, Cultural Impacts, Education, Radio

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MEDIACHANNEL AFFILIATES COMMUNICATING FOR CHANGE

Aboriginal Peoples TV Network
access news
Alliance for Community Media
AllstonBrighton Free Radio
Alternative Radio
Alternatives: Action and Communication Network...
Ashoka
Asia-Pacific Development Info. Programme
Assoc. Mondiale des Radiodiffeuseurs Comm.
Audio Visual Forum
Book Aid International
Bruderhof Radio
Cause Communications
Commonwealth Broadcasting Association
Community Media Network
Comunicacion e Informacion de la Mujer
Development Media Agency Trust
DevMedia
Different Voices Network
DUTV
Electronic Development and Environment Info...
Foundation Netherlands Centre Indigenous...
Global Information Network
Globalvision
Human Media
i-Contact Video Network
Information for Development in 21st Century
IndianNGOs.com
International Broadcasting Trust
International Development Research Centre
Internews
Internews Russia
Journalists Resource Center
Katha
Madhyam
Media Action International
MELISSA Program
Missionary Service News Agency
Mothers' Union
NewsForChange.com (Working Assets)
Oasis TV Inc.
OneWorld Austria
OneWorld Online
One World Photography and Documentary...
One World Broadcasting Trust
Open Channel
Ovation Development Consultancy Svcs.
Paloma Television
Panos Institute
Panos Institute West Africa
The Peace & Development Center
Peoples Video Network
POOR Magazine Inc.
ProPoor InfoTech Centre
Public Service Advertising Research Center
Radio Bridge Overseas Trust
Radio for Peace International
Radio Free Allston
Radio Free Nashville
Runningman Communications
Sound Partners for Community Health
SARDC
Sri Lanka Environmental Journalists
Stichting Small World Media Nederland
Stop TB Initiative
The Thomson Foundation
TV Trust for the Environment
Undercurrents
UNESCO
Orbicom
UniMondo
UNICEF
World Association for Christian Communications
The World Bank Group