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The Drum Beat 293 - Commission for Africa Report: Communication for DevelopmentPublication DateApril 4, 2005
*** The Commission for Africa Report An intro from Warren: The "Commission for Africa", chaired by Prime Minister Tony Blair, launched its report March 11 2005 in London, UK. There were 16 other Commisioners including Benjamin W. Mkapa [President of Tanzania], Fola Adeola [Chairman of FATE Foundation in Nigeria], Rt. Hon. Gordon Brown MP [Chancellor of the Exchequer, UK], K.Y. Amoako [Executive Secretary, Economic Commission for Africa & UN Under-Secretary-General, Ghana], Anna Tibaijuka [UN Habitat, Tanzania], and Michel Camdessus [Africa Personal Representative, France, previous Managing Director of the IMF]. The full list of Commissioners along with other details can be seen online - click here. With such a distinguished and influential group assessing the situation in Africa and highlighting the best way forward for accelerated and improved development in that continent, there was very considerable interest in the Commission's analysis and proposals. This interest included many of us in the development communication community. Exactly how would the Commission position development communication? So, now, when someone questions the relevance and value of development communication to addressing the core issues in Africa [or anywhere else for that matter], you can quote the views of President Mkapa and others who highlighted that the main elements of development communication are core and central to any effective action. - Warren Feek *** This Drum Beat focuses on the Report of the Commission for Africa, "Our Common Interest". In this report, there is extensive reference to and approval of core processes and programmes that are an essential part of development communication. A selection of the relevant quotes have been organised below around some of the main elements of the development communication (including media for development) process:
For the full report as a PDF file, please click here. For additional excerpts relevant to communication for development, please click here. For details about the report in languages other than English, please click here. For information on The Africa Commission's membership, purpose, process and other important background details, please click here. For reactions to the report from civil society organisations within Africa, please click here. *** AFRICA COMMISSION REPORT: COMMUNICATION FOR DEVELOPMENT 1. Essential Information & Communication Processes One thing that has emerged from all our considerations on issues of governance and capacity is the importance of good information and communication. In so many areas information can be a valuable driver for change. It is also necessary for monitoring and measuring performance and results. It is the lifeblood of transparent, informed and open societies, able to debate, decide and implement successful reforms, measure their impact and hold their governments to account. For political leaders to be held accountable, citizens must have proper information about government revenues and budget allocations. Openness makes it more likely that resources will be used efficiently. The aim is to foster adoption of good policies and practice by sharing information on what is working, and what is not. Peer pressure produces a strong incentive to act. Life skills that address issues like HIV and AIDS and challenge gender inequalities in a clear and comprehensive way are vital. Children should learn early about risky behaviours and build assertive communication skills. The younger generation could be provided with a window of opportunity to combat the pandemic and tackle stigma if given the right knowledge that is personalised to make it directly relevant to children's lives. Broadcasting and other methods of public communications can play a major role in preventing illness as well as increasing demand for health care, such as encouraging young people to seek sexual and reproductive health care. Examples of this include the Zambian Youth Forum that campaigned on reproductive health issues and gained a place on the National AIDS Council, and the expansion in FM radio in Uganda, which has been linked to the falling prevalence of HIV. African governments should enable community involvement to improve health outcomes as well as increase accountability. The development of health information and management systems is central to increasing accountability to communities. 2. Amplifying the Voices of Those Most Affected The right to receive information and to the freedom of expression is set out in the African Charter for Human and Peoples' Rights. This must be respected. In all this we insist on the need for Africa's voice to be heard more clearly. And we underscore that the first responsibility for change and improved governance lies with Africans themselves, in which the rich world has a moral duty - as well as a powerful motive of self-interest - to assist. The answer to this is putting mechanisms in place to make sure that the voices of all citizens can actually influence decisions of their governments. To do this requires good economic and financial management systems. But it also means empowering key groups within society. Individual voices and grassroots action can make a profound difference. The Jubilee 2000 campaign proved that. It was started by two individuals and ended with a million people on the streets worldwide, demanding that the debt of poor countries be dropped. The governments of the rich world were forced to listen and US$100 billion worth of bilateral debt was written off. It also means that people must be given a voice in defining an area's problems, deciding on solutions, and allocating resources to them. Good intentions are not enough. Mechanisms are needed to make sure that the voices of all citizens are heard; to monitor how governments respond to what they hear; and to enforce the rights of ordinary citizens. Within participatory approaches, the more powerful often have a vested interest in maintaining the status quo and the education and influence to ensure that their voices are heard. Meaningful participation is a political phenomenon and requires those who traditionally make decisions to relinquish some of their control and to hear voices they may not agree with or may not usually listen to, including those of women and youth. Business groups, trades unions and other non-governmental organisations (NGOs) can often speak for a community, especially where individuals can find it difficult to make their voice heard or are unwilling to speak out. *** Soul Beat Africa has an exclusive focus on development communication in Africa. Visit the site - click here! *** 3. Deeper Media Engagement & Development The media is an educator and key information source that can help deliver the MDGs, promote transparent governance and, through balanced reporting, help prevent conflicts. The wide benefits from plural media means it acts as a public good in development. Information flows in Africa through a variety of media, including established media such as radio, traditional communication such as song and story-telling, and new technologies including mobile phones. Private media outlets and liberalised airwaves are increasing. For example, Mali now has 30 private newspapers, 147 independent local radio stations, seven state radio stations and one television station. In Uganda, those villages that in 1985 had ten community broadcasting stations have 300 or more now. This rapid expansion has generated some problems, including inadequately trained journalists, poor professional standards and weak self-regulation. Moreover, much of African media remains government owned or controlled. The monopolisation of media by any one group, including the government, undermines media freedom and popular trust, and creates space for distortion and rumour. 4. Increasing Participation, Dialogue & Debate Most projects and programmes work when they are designed locally with strong participation, and where they reflect local aspirations - both because local people understand local circumstances better, and because they will be more motivated to help these approaches succeed. That is a lesson of development experience which must be applied ever more strongly... But while the development solutions will come largely from African countries and communities, the world and especially the developed countries must take responsibility for helping Africa to fund these actions. Even within poor countries, the poorest people are those who are excluded from information, from government services, from full participation in society, politics and the economy and even informal community support systems. All too often the reason for the exclusion is discrimination, for example against women, disabled persons, ethnic or linguistic minorities, or persons with HIV or AIDS. Exclusion makes it especially difficult to escape from poverty; worse still, the disadvantage is transmitted from one generation to the next, as parents are unable to invest in the health, education, or nutrition of their children. Policies often fail because they are created without a full understanding of the local situation, people or history. Africa's diversity makes this point particularly pertinent. The term 'participation' holds a variety of meanings, but in essence is about people expressing their views and taking part in the decisions that affect their lives... Although in the past participation has been associated with community development projects, African participation is required broadly, from the project to the national or international level. Creating opportunities for people to be heard can lead to unpredictable and often contradictory messages but has the potential to inform policies, improve accountability and improve service provision. In Tanzania, a community participation project that included a focus on managing for results with better information systems has led to a 46 per cent drop in child mortality African governments and the international community should base policy change on broad participatory research. Participation should occur at all levels and stages of policymaking, including during monitoring and evaluation. Local authorities are a good entry point for democratic debate. Local or regional expertise should be invested in, in preference to bringing-in external experts. Decision makers should allow long timeframes for participation and ensure that the least powerful are able to express themselves. Facilitators should be trained in negotiations and communication, and informed of local gender norms and power relations. *** NEW PULSE POLL! The Commission for Africa Report "basically confirms what African NGOs and Governments have been saying all along. Core structural adjustment policy conditionality associated with debt and aid packages for Africa for the last two decades have been destructive to human security and economic growth. With this report, the World Bank and IMF must stop." *** 5. Expanding New Technology Access & Use Growth will also require a massive investment in infrastructure to break down the internal barriers that hold Africa back. Donors should fund a doubling of spending on infrastructure - from rural roads and small-scale irrigation to regional highways, railways, larger power projects and Information & Communications Technology (ICT). Access to new information technologies, and the mobile phone in particular, is also having a profound cultural impact. This is heightened in communities where any form of communication over distance has meant long journeys, often on foot. Where many Africans never experienced the cultural leap of connectedness through fixed lines, the mobile phone provides a new form of identity. With scarce resources, collective creativity helps people get connected.... The form and speed of change associated with new technologies is an expression of culture and may defy existing economic models in the way it is driven by personal empowerment. The transition to e-governance is rarely smooth in any country but African e-governance faces two additional barriers: the lack of ICT infrastructure and mass connectivity to the Internet, and under-resourced and unaccountable bureaucracies. A good start could be for a number of African governments to pilot development of e-governance strategies, and then spread good practice developed through them to a second group of countries. The international community should support this work and consolidate and expand e-governance training for African civil servants. 6. Understanding & Working with the Cultural Context The trouble is that although we all use the same terms, we often do not mean the same thing by them. Ideas of political and economic freedom can be manifested in very different ways and with very different results. It is culture that dictates the differences, which is why culture is so important when it comes to policy making. We want culture to become an inherent component of all development strategies - not just in terms of cultural products, but also in defining the terms of the development debate and the actions that follow. Culture becomes a way of working as well as an end in itself. As well as hearing individual perspectives, we recognise that institutions have cultures too. It is, for example, widely perceived that some international institutions, such as the IMF, World Bank, UN Security Council and even many NGOs in developed countries (some of which are perceived in Africa as arms of the donor governments that fund them), do not adequately give space for African participation and perspectives in their thinking. Those who ignore culture are doomed to failure in Africa. The outsiders who ran a workshop on AIDS in Angola recently learned that. They came to pass on their knowledge about transmission and prevention. They left having obtained new understandings of cultural practices such as initiation rites, scar-tattooing, blood brother practices, means of breaking the umbilical cord, polygamy and traditional marriage and healing practices. Only then did they come to understand why their education and awareness programmes had not resulted in higher use of condoms or lowered rates of infection. They had not known enough about local cultural norms and values on sexuality. *** RESULTS of our most recent Pulse Poll At the centre of the international development community's response to the Tsunami should have been the direct provision of USD 500 equivalent in local currency straight to each affected person. Agree: 35.71% *** African Development Communication Programme Experiences African Development Communication Evaluations African Development Communication Strategic Thinking African Development Communication Training Opportunities *** The Drum Beat seeks to cover the full range of communication for development activities. Inclusion of an item does not imply endorsement or support by The Partners. Please send material for The Drum Beat to the Editor - Deborah Heimann dheimann@comminit.com To reproduce any portion of The Drum Beat, see our policy. Placed on the Communication Initiative site April 04 2005 Last Updated July 02 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 POSTED |
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