| Advanced Search |
Knowledge CategoriesClassifieds |
Average Rating: 4.5 out of 5 (2 ratings submitted)
DDS Sangham RadioCountry
India
Programme Summary
Launched in Andhra Pradesh, India, on World Rural Women's Day (October 15) 2008, DDS Sangham Radio is a community radio station owned, managed, and operated exclusively by women from rural marginalised communities (the "Dalit" caste). The station, broadcast on 90.4 FM, is an initiative of the Deccan Development Society (DDS), a non-governmental organisation (NGO) that works with 100 groups of the economically poorest Dalit women. Communication StrategiesThis all-woman, all-Dalit sangham (community) radio station, which boasts the signature tune, "akka chillelu kudi podame (come sisters, let us go to the sangham radio)", is seen as the first "audible" voice of the state's Dalit women. Female reporters journey daily into various villages within the Medak district in search of stories that are neither breaking news nor juicy snippets that sell. The goal, rather, is to glean information for reports that strike a chord with listeners: Every night at 8:00, the channel airs a one-and-a-half-hour package of local news and views, tidbits on herbal medicines for animals, reports on farming tools, and folk songs and stories. To illustrate the strategy: while domestic abuse may no longer be newsworthy, if the station airs a case of the wife resisting her husband's violence - women might be inspired to talk, think, act in empowering ways. "The women want to use this new media space to save their dying language and cultures, spread their message of sisterhood, ecological agriculture, women's control over seeds and a host of their issues." The radio jockeys who control the operations of the radio are two young women whose current earning is between Rs. 150 and 200 per day - much different from the Rs 10-15 for 6-8 hours of work that other Dalit women may make in various jobs (a reflection of Zaheerabad's poor land, which offers limited livelihood opportunities in agriculture, and lack of industrialisation). Women affiliated with the radio station note that their association with the project is only possible because Dalit women in the area are accustomed to working outside the home. Development IssuesWomen, Agriculture. Key PointsDDS has adopted a participatory communication approach to strengthen its initiatives in the region, using a range of horizontal communication techniques including: Sangam (village-level) meetings, Jathras (festivals), social audits, participatory rural appraisals (PRAs), and interface sessions with government agencies and other NGOs. These strategies have been essentially interpersonal in nature. However, in the new environment of decentralisation and optimal use of new information and communication technologies (ICTs), DDS began exploring ways and means by which its communication potential could be enhanced. Video and/or audio technology seemed to be a particularly promising option, given the organisation's core commitment: create ways for disadvantaged, often illiterate rural women to share their valuable knowledge and to express themselves. To crystallise this idea, DDS contemplated a community radio station. "For the women who are equipped with extraordinary oral narrative skills, radio is a natural medium." According to DDS, "The poor dalit women who are members of the DDS sangams have their own expectations from a radio of their own....For instance, many have felt that mainstream media have marginalized information specific to certain crops such as millets and other minor grain that are central to their food security and dietary requirements." To that end, the programming content of the station seeks to serve the information, education, and cultural needs of the region by focusing on:
The station has already received a congratulatory note from the upper-caste sarpanch. But what matters most to the women is feedback from those the station is meant to serve. One listener asked if her children could work as reporters. Another felt proud to be interviewed, saying, "I always heard others. Now I hear my voice, my views. I too will be recognized some day." ContactP V Satheesh
Director
Deccan Development Society (DDS)
101, Kishan Residency
Hyderabad Andhra Pradesh
500 016
India
Tel: 91 40 27764577 or 91 40 27764744
Fax: 91 40 27764722
SourcePublic Radio International (PRI)'s "The World", February 5 2009 (click here to listen to the programme); October 26 2008 article on the Newspaper Articles website; RadioActivity blog entry, October 15 2008; DDS website; and email from P V Satheesh to The Communication Initiative on May 9 2009. Placed on the Communication Initiative site February 10 2009 Last Updated May 11 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 |
Special FocusPoll: e-Health - where to?
In what direction should current e-Health research and technical development go?
|