ClassifiedsMexico XVII - Communication |
Average Rating: no ratings submitted
The Okhayeni Strong RecordersCountrySouth Africa RegionAfrica Programme SummaryLaunched in 2005, Okhayeni Strong Recorders is a participatory children's radio project designed to foster public awareness about, and encourage appropriate responses to, the impact of poverty and HIV on children and their communities. The children are involved in the ongoing production of personal radio diary programmes as well as programmes which document and explore local issues of their choice. Programmes are aired by broadcast partner Maputaland Community Radio, as well as by other interested radio stations. This is a collaborative project between the Children’s Institute at the University of Cape Town, the Radio Workshop, Zisize Educational Trust, and Okhayeni Primary School in Ingwavuma, northern Kwazulu-Natal. Communication StrategiesThis project draws on the medium of radio to provide children, who are all directly or indirectly affected by HIV in their communities, with the opportunity to depict their lives, insights, and concerns. The strategy involves using information and communication technology (ICT) to equip children with useful life skills and to give voice to their experiences, as well as to enable their stories and interests to inform and possibly shape the attitudes and behaviours of listeners. Development IssuesChildren, HIV/AIDS. Key PointsAccording to organisers, children who grow up in the rural expanse of Ingwavuma, in the far north-eastern corner of Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa, experience extensive poverty, summer-time malaria risk, a legacy of under-resourced or absent service provision, and a burgeoning HIV epidemic. Organisers explain that not all children who participate in the Okhayeni Strong Recorders project are directly affected by AIDS, but all are affected by virtue of the fact that they live in a neighbourhood where antenatal HIV prevalence is at least 35%. The project has reportedly had a number of positive outcomes. These include:
PartnersChildren’s Institute, Zisize Educational Trust, Okhayeni Primary School, Maputaland Community Radio. As of this writing, the project has been supported financially through IBIS and the United Nations Association for the United States of America HERO project (2005); the Open Society Foundation (2005-2007); Stop AIDS Now (2006); and the Media Development and Diversity Agency (2007-2009). ContactHelen Meintjes
Senior Researcher, HIV/AIDS
Children's Institute, University of Cape Town
Cape Town
South Africa
Tel: +27 21 689 7941
Fax: +27 21 689 8330
Bridget Walters
SourceChildren's Institute website on May 31 2006 and June 27 2007; email from Helen Meintjes to The Communication Initiative on July 7 2007 and on July 17 2008; and email from Charmaine Smith to The Communication Initiative on August 15 2007. Placed on the Communication Initiative site May 31 2006 Last Updated July 20 2008 |
Login / RegisiterCulturally Effective StrategiesIf culturally delicate factors such as male circumcision or fewer multiple concurrent partners are to be effectively addressed, which communication strategies are most required? [choose a maximum of 3]
HIV/AIDS News |