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Mexico XVII - Communication

Communication perspectives - Mexico XVII AIDS Conference
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Pensions Not Poverty Campaign

Country

Canada, France, Germany, Japan, Russia, South Africa, United States

Region

Global, North America, Western Europe, South East and East Asia, Eastern Europe and Central Asia, Africa

Programme Summary

In the lead-up to the G8 summit to be held in June 2007, the United Kingdom (UK)-based organisation Help the Aged launched an advocacy campaign using information and community technology (ICT) as a tool to engage citizens around the world in protecting the rights of ageing people to freedom from poverty. (The Group of Eight (G8) is an international forum for the governments of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States; for more details on the 2007 summit, click here.) The purpose of Pensions Not Poverty is to get citizens involved by demanding that their world leaders (those taking part in the G8 summit) give older people living in the economically poorest countries state pensions as a basic human right.

Communication Strategies

This campaign uses ICTs to mobilise citizens to raise their voices on behalf of elderly people in developing countries, to the end of fostering economic development goals globally (such as those articulated by the United Nations (UN), as part of the Millennium Development Goals, or MDGs). The hope is that, by raising awareness about this issue and providing ideas for ways to communicate with those in power who may in a position to amplify ageing persons' voices and needs, citizens of all ages can take action.

Specifically, a section has been set up on the Help the Aged website which features information, case studies, and action points for those seeking to help end poverty for older people. In light of the G8 summit, to gain background on why the elderly are struggling with poverty and how to potentially address this problem, visitors to the website may access a page with various facts indicating how social pensions have made a difference to older people in developing countries. They may also read
Help the Aged's "Pensions Not Poverty: A Basic Human Right" (click here to access it in PDF format). The key strategy underpinning the latter document, as well as the 5-minute film narrated by author Bill Bryson, is to share the personal tales of ageing people around the world, as part of this effort to educate people around the world about the importance of what organisers deem a human-rights-based crisis.

The case studies shared through this campaign signal various communication strategies for addressing poverty among the ageing. For example, one such study focuses on the experiences of a middle-aged woman in one of South Africa's economically poorest provinces who works as a Skills Development Facilitator for the local non-governmental organisation (NGO) Muthande Society for the Aged (MUSA). In an effort to tackle poverty, MUSA has trained a team of older people to work as literacy tutors; they hold courses in Zulu, English, and numeracy, with lessons designed to help students cope with everyday challenges such as filling out pension forms, sending bills, and using telephone numbers. MUSA also attempts to address the needs of older people living with HIV/AIDS across the province through its centres, which provide a place where elderly people (including those dealing with issues related to the disease) can socialise, take part in activities, and engage with one another.

The hope, then, is that visitors to the Pensions Not Poverty website - having been educated by factual details and inspired by personal stories and strategies such as that reflected by the MUSA participant's experience cited above - will use ICTs to take action to challenge world leaders attending the G8 meeting to protect the rights of the elderly. The method suggested here for doing so is visiting a "Have Your Say" page on the Help the Aged website, which leads to an email form (which can be modified) to be sent to the UK's Hilary Benn. The gist of this suggested text is that, until all older people receive a social pension, the international community will struggle to "make poverty history".

Development Issues

Ageing, Economic Development, Rights.

Key Points

According to the report "Pensions Not Poverty: A Basic Human Right" [PDF], by 2050, there will be an estimated 2 billion people over 60, two-thirds of whom will live in economically poor countries. To help address poverty amongst this population, Help the Aged claims, governments around the world must ensure that social pensions become a vital component of relevant aid, development, and debt-relief initiatives. Help the Aged indicates that there is strong evidence that providing small but regular transfers of cash, in the form of a pension, has huge benefits for economically poorer people. For example, in South Africa, the old age pension has increased the income of the economically poorest 5% of the population by 50%. A social pension can help address health issues as well, Help the Aged explains, by, for instance, serving as a source of income for older people who have to care for their HIV-positive children or grandchildren orphaned by AIDS.

Contact

Dan McLean
International Communications Manager
Help the Aged
207-221 Pentonville Road
London N1 9UZ
United Kingdom
Tel: 020 7239 1943
Fax: 020 7278 1116
Dan.McLean@helptheaged.org.uk
info@helptheaged.org.uk
Pensions Not Poverty page on the Help the Aged website

Source

Press release ("Older People around the World Deserve Pensions Not Poverty Says Help the Aged") and case study ("Profile of Thoko Molefe in South Africa for Help the Aged's Campaign 'Pensions not Poverty'") sent via email from Finola Robinson of Society Media to The Communication Initiative on May 15 2007.


Placed on the Communication Initiative site May 18 2007
Last Updated May 18 2007

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