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Recognising and Building Communication Rights |
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Claiming and using communication rights are integral to shaping societies that fully respond to human needs and people everywhere needs to improve their economic, political, social and cultural lives. Attaining communication rights for women is a step towards gender equality. Projects will claim and build communication rights for human development, social inclusion, and participatory citizenship, as well as creating an enabling environment by advancing awareness and recognition of communication rights locally, nationally or internationally.
For more resources on communication rights visit: WACC’s Centre for Communication Rights portal Objectives - Increase awareness and recognition of communication rights as a human right and as a part of fair and sustainable political, social, cultural and economic development.
- Promote awareness and recognition of women’s communication rights.
- Advance the communication rights of marginalised groups including indigenous and tribal peoples, disabled people, refugees, migrants and others, or strengthen their communication capacity through training, equipment acquisition, networking, research and advocacy.
- Enable communities to access and make use of appropriate information and communication technologies.
Links Campaign for Communication Rights in the Information Society The Universal Declaration of Human Rights Reading and ResourcesWhy are communication rights so controversial? The communication rights issue, the right to communicate (r2c), is among the most controversial in the negotiation process leading up to the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS). The right to communicate affirms and restores human dignity Communication as a right is a comparatively new concept, although its roots reach deep into the history of human thought. The arguments that underlie it are complex and contested. Communication is Inscribed in Human Nature The discourse on the right to communicate seems to be gathering a new momentum) Many people, at the threshold of a new millennium, experience a sense of powerlessness about the world around them. They want to speak out but cannot make themselves heard. | Current Projects
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Young People's Voices Matter!, Casa de la Mujer de la Unión (CMU)
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Defending the Communication Rights of the Quechua People, Coordinadora Nacional de Radio (CNR)
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Radio School for Local Communicators, Radio Viva
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Media for All, Centro de Encuentros y Diálogos (CED)
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Media Strategies for Latin Americans of African Descent, AFROAMERICA XXI
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One Minute of Inclusion for People with Disabilities, MID Institute
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'Reclaiming our Voice', Asociación Civil Red de Comunicación Indígena (RCI)
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Local Network of Communicators, Asociación Civil de la Azotea
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Defending the Rights of Haitian Immigrants through Communication, Espacio Insular
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Strengthening Women's Rights for Development, Organisation des Femmes pour le Bien-Etre et le Développement (OFBED-ONG)
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