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Features

New resources on climate adaptation strategies
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Écrit par Philip Lee, WACC Deputy-Director of Programs   
Vendredi, 23 Mars 2012 09:30
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With climate change and climate justice high on the global agenda, many development agencies have long been focusing on adaptation strategies. Sharing information and knowledge both nationally and inter-regionally is crucial, especially in regions prone to flooding and drought and where it is urgent to address food security.

The European Climate Adaptation Platform (CLIMATE-ADAPT), an interactive web-based tool on adaptation to climate change, went online today at the European Environment Agency (EEA) in Copenhagen. The European Climate Adaptation Platform is a publicly accessible, web-based platform designed to support policy-makers at EU, national, regional and local levels in the development of climate change adaptation measures and policies.

The Association for Progressive Communications (APC) in collaboration with the International Development Research Centre (IDRC), has been preparing a series of reports discussing opportunities for information and communication technology (ICT) to help individuals and communities adapt to water scarcity as a result of climate change.

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Features

WACC spotlights Internet obstacles and challenges
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By Philip Lee, WACC Deputy-Director of Programs

WACC’s latest No-nonsense guide asks what restrictions, if any, should be placed on the Internet. As a church-related organization working for communication rights, WACC seeks ethical guidelines for digital media platforms.

The Internet is a vital part of today’s communications scene. But it is under threat from governments intent on stifling freedom of expression and from global corporations intent on levying high charges for access.
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Features

Internet activists challenge content regulation
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  By Ali Symons, Senior Editor, Anglican Church of Canada and Executive Member of WACC-North America

Activists may have halted the United States’ Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), but the fight over internet content regulation continues.

On Jan. 18, an estimated 7,000 websites—including Google and Reddit—protested SOPA. English Wikipedia blacked out its site and posted a statement saying SOPA “could fatally damage the free and open internet.” Millions of people echoed this concern through online petitions, editorials, and rallies.

SOPA and its sister bill, the Protect Intellectual Property Act (PIPA), were designed to stop copyright infringement online, especially on foreign websites. Under SOPA, a website accused of posting or linking to copyrighted material without permission would be blocked by U.S. internet service providers (ISPs.)
Photo by Chetan Soni (WACC Photo competition 2010)
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Features

Hype or Hope? The impact of digital media on journalism and development
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By Tiziana Conti, Administration and Fundraising Coordinator, WACC-UK

"Hype or Hope? The impact of digital media on journalism and development
” was the theme of the German “Forum Media and Development” symposium (FoME) held at the Deutsche Welle in Bonn, Germany, on 25th and 26th of October. The Symposium explored how “ digital technology” is changing production, distribution and consumption of media and its potential to contribute to the development of free and independent media in developing countries.

“There is a lot of fear and skepticism in the North, about the new digital tools,” said Justin Arenstein from the Association of Independent Publishers, Rest of the World Media. “Most journalists think that these tools are disruptive and that they are eroding the ability of journalists to do their jobs properly, whereas in the South they have been very empowering, they have created a more level playing field where journalists even in small cities can now access the same production tools and the same search tools."

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Features

Media freedom requires political change and regulatory reform
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Écrit par Philip Lee, WACC Deputy Director Programmes   
Mardi, 06 Septembre 2011 10:12
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Freedom House is celebrating its 70th anniversary in 2011. It has had a chequered history since it was established in 1941 in New York City from an amalgamation of two groups formed with the quiet encouragement of President Franklin D. Roosevelt to encourage popular support for American involvement in World War II.

Freedom House claims to have been an aggressive foe of 1950s McCarthyism and an early supporter of the movement for racial equality. In 1973, it launched Freedom in the World, an annual survey of global political rights and civil liberties. Employing a methodology devised by leading social scientists, the survey rated every country in the world according to a series of indicators basic to freedom. Some critics have identified a tendency to condemn states opposed to US interests and to be unduly sympathetic to those regimes supportive of US interests.

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Features

Bossey summer school students share their experiences
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By Teresia Mutuku, Communication Officer and Web Manager, WACC

A Summer School on “Communication and Religion” jointly organized by WACC, the Institute of Christian Communication of the Friedrich Alexander University of Erlangen-Nuremburg, Germany and the Ecumenical Institute Bossey of the World Council of Churches (WCC) concluded with students praising the program for its diversity and depth.

The Summer school, held at the Ecumenical Institute at Bossey, Switzerland, 1-14 August 2011, was attended by 17 students from Armenia, Brazil, China, Ethiopia, Germany, Ghana, Nevis, Sri Lanka and Ukraine. WACC sponsored a number of the students to attend.

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Features

World Council of Churches calls on faith communities to work for peace with justice
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The World Council of Churches (WCC) marked the end of its Decade to Overcome Violence with an International Ecumenical Peace Convocation (IEPC). Attended by some 1,000 delegates from all over the world, it took place in Kingston, Jamaica, 17-25 May 2011.

The IEPC took the next step in an ecumenical journey intended to explore in depth the concept of “just peace”, to address ethical and theological questions, and to strengthen the networks and partnerships necessary for ecumenical peace-building and peace advocacy today. The outcomes of the IEPC will influence the agenda of the next WCC Assembly, taking place in 2013 in Busan, South Korea, on the theme “God of life, lead us to justice and peace”.

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Features

UN Review on AIDS: Is the World Moving Away from HIV?
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Ecumenical Advocacy Alliance (EAA)

Press Release, 11 April 2011

UNITED NATIONS  -- Representatives of faith-based advocacy and humanitarian groups participating in an 8 April hearing at the United Nations (UN) on the HIV pandemic said the meeting highlighted progress that had been made but also revealed serious challenges ahead.

Efforts by faith groups and others will have to be particularly focused and intense in the weeks leading up to a high-level 8-10 June meeting at the UN that will assess progress and set new targets in the global response to HIV and AIDS.

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Features

Thinking and communicating outside the box
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Religion Communicators Council  (RCC) 2011

By Philip Lee, WACC Deputy-Director of Programmes


  The National Convention of the Religion Communicators Council took place in Little Rock, Arkansas, USA, 31 March to 2 April 2011 on the theme “Communicating Outside the Box”.

As a curtain-raiser to the Convention, WACC Global and WACC North America joined forces to screen The Garden at the End of the World, a documentary by Australian film-maker Gary Caganoff and winner of the WACC-SIGNIS Human Rights Award 2010. The film portrays the lives of those hardest hit by the consequences of war in Afghanistan – widows and orphans, who number tens of thousands. It follows two women, Afghan refugee Mahboba Rawi and internationally recognised permaculturalist Rosemary Morrow, who offer alternative views on how to solve the problems facing the country.
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Features

Will Public Service Broadcasting survive?
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What is the future for the Public Broadcasting Service in the USA?

Compiled by María Teresa Aveggio, Programme Manager, Communication Rights Programme, WACC


  

Almost a month ago the US House of Representatives voted to eliminate funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), the institution responsible for distributing federal funds that support over a thousand local public broadcasting stations.

Created by the 1967 Public Broadcasting Act, the CPB is a non-profit corporation funded by the US Federal Government to promote public broadcasting in the country. By 1969 the CPB started what is now known as the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). A year later, the CPB formed the National Public Radio (NPR) a network of public radio stations across the country.


Image source: VoxPublica
  
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Features

Ca communication pour la paix : c’est aussi l’affaire des communautés religieuses
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Rév. Karin Achtelstetter - présentation par la WACC: Cinquième réunion de la Commission de l’IFAPA, 11 au 14 mars 2011, Mombasa, Kenya 

Inspirés par la foi chrétienne, les membres et les partenaires de l’Association mondiale pour la communication chrétienne (WACC) font la promotion de la communication pour le changement social, estimant que la communication est un droit humain fondamental. Lorsque la communication est rendue impossible, l’ensemble de la société s’en voit appauvrie. À l’échelle mondiale, régionale et locale, la WACC soutient la diversité dans les médias et l’accès égal et abordable aux ressources de communication et d’information. Nous concrétisons cet engagement par les plaidoyers, l’éducation, la formation, ainsi que la création et le partage du savoir. Nous savons que nous ne sommes pas seuls dans cette quête. Ainsi, nous travaillons avec des partenaires confessionnels et séculiers, privilégiant les besoins des personnes vivant dans la pauvreté, qui sont marginalisées et démunies..

 
 Rév. Karin Achtelstetter (2ème personne debout à gauche) avec les participants de la 5ème rencontre de la Commission de IFAPA, à Mombasa au Kenya (Photo de Kristy Bergman )
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Features

Guatemala: Media monopoly "squeezes out alternative voices"
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“Controlling information is taking away people's right to information, something that is fundamental for real democracy to exist” (Gonzalo Marroquín, Guatemalan journalist and President of Inter American Press Association)

By Teresia Mutuku, Communication Officer and Web Manager, WACC


 Over the past 30 years, information and communication technologies in Guatemala have evolved significantly, but media monopoly has remained unchanged.

“One thing that has stayed the same is the concentration of media ownership in a very few hands,” says Dennis Smith, President of the World Association for Christian Communication (WACC), in a recent interview in Guatemala City.
Dennis Smith, President, WACC and  Evelyn Blanck, Executive Director, Centro Civitas  
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Features

“Walking with us and feeling what we feel”
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The struggle against feminicide in Guatemala

By Teresia Mutuku, Communication Officer and Web Manager, WACC

  Killing a woman simply because she is a woman is a tragic phenomenon, unfathomable and beyond imagination. But this is a reality faced by hundreds of women in Guatemala and other countries in Central America.

More than 4,500 women have been killed since the year 2000 in Guatemala alone. The majority of the victims were between the ages of 16 and 30, according to the latest publication by CEDEPCA (Centro Evangélico de Estudios Pastorales en Centro América) a partner network of WACC (World Association for Christian Communication). About 700 women were killed in 2010, as feminicide continues to take its toll.

Participants of the WACC-CEDEPCA workshops on feminicide
  
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Features

HIV- AIDS stigma: The Story of Adwoa
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By Joyce Larko, Christian Council of Ghana

  Adwoa Amina (not her real name) is a beautiful young woman who works as a sales person for an organization in the Ga West Municipality, in Ghana. Adwoa’s fiancé suddenly died after a series of health complications. Soon after his demise, Adwoa started losing weight and suffered from one sickness to the other. She was later diagnosed HIV positive.

In her attempt to avoid the stigmatization that is associated with most persons living with HIV/AIDS in her community, she decided not to disclose her status to anyone.  Her health deteriorated. Her family took her to a prayer camp to seek spiritual help. But she did not get better despite a series of “spiritual cleansing”.  
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Features

Human rights and communication rights: a necessary alliance
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By María Teresa Aveggio, Programme Manager

    As part of its work on communication for social change,  WACC has supported some 79 projects in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean and Latin America under its programme Building and Recognising Communication Rights since 2007. The concept of communication rights is a new one and partners and funders frequently ask what are communication rights?

For a long time now many groups and organisations, as well as individuals, have been working on the idea that communication rights are fundamental to the democratisation of society since they “strengthen the capacity of people and communities to use communication and media to pursue their goals in the economic, political, social and cultural spheres. They support key human rights that collectively enhance people’s capacity to communicate in their own general interest and for the common good.” (No-Nonsense guide to communication rights http://www.centreforcommunicationrights.org/).
     
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La WACC favorise la communication comme droit humain de base, essentielle à la dignité des individus et à la communauté.

The World Association for Christian Communication 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 an incorporated Charitable Organisation in Canada (number 83970 9524 RR0001) with its head office at 308 Main Street, Toronto ON, M4C 4X7.

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