Development action with informed and engaged societies

After nearly 28 years, The Communication Initiative (The CI) Global is entering a new chapter. 

Following a period of transition, the global website has been transferred to the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits) in South Africa, where it will be administered by the Social and Behaviour Change Communication Division. Wits' commitment to social change and justice makes it a trusted steward for The CI's legacy and future. 

On the transfer, co-founder Victoria Martin expressed her pleasure to see this work continue under Wits' leadership, knowing that co-founder Warren Feek (1953–2024) would have felt deep pride in The CI Global's Africa-led direction. 

As Wits, we honour the team and partners who sustained The CI for decades and look forward building from that strong base. This includes co-founders Warren Feek (1953-2024) and Victoria Martin as well as La Iniciativa de Comunicación (CILA), which continues independently at lainiciativadecomunicacion.com with links to The CI Global site. We are also eager to forge new partnerships and entertain new ideas as we consider how best to contribute to social and behaviour change in our rapidly evolving environment.

If you are joining the International Social and Behaviour Change Communication (SBCC) Summit in Panama, please join Wits and CILA on Monday, 22 June, to share your thoughts and suggestion for the relaunch of the Communication Initiative. We will be in Pacifica 5 from 12-1:25 for the Refuel, Reflect, and Renew Lunch Series: The Communication Initiative: celebrating a driving force for Communication for Social Change and the way forward. We will reflect on the legacy of Warren Feek and family in creating the Communication Initiative, consider the contributions of CI over the years and then turn our attention towards the future in this dynamic session. 

If you are unable to join us in Panama, we still want to hear from you. Please contribute your thoughts by following this link: https://redcap.link/CommunicationInitiative2026 or reaching out to ci_surveys@commint.com

You can also follow the QR Code:

 https://redcap.link/CommunicationInitiative2026

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Looking to 2015: On gender equality and communication rights

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Author: Sarah Macharia, July 14 2013    The recently released World Bank World Development Report 2012 on Gender Equality and Development notes persistent gender disparities in "sticky domains" identified as, economic activity, earnings, house and care work responsibility, asset ownership, and constraints to women's agency in both the private and public spheres. The report underlines a rootedness in "deeply entrenched gender roles and social norms" as one reason behind the stickiness, adding that the "gaps tend to be reproduced across generations".

Social norms are understood as those practices, attitudes, behaviours, modes of reasoning, that are institutionalized in our everyday lives, informing societal worldviews of what is "normal", natural, thus, acceptable, on the one hand, and what is "deviant" or unnatural on the other hand. Social norms underpin the continued discrimination against women, gender violence and power relations of subordination of some groups and dominance of others.

The challenge becomes how to expose and overturn those norms that undergird, justify and normalize inequality. Social norms are constituent components of culture, which in turn is linked to communication in intimate and complex ways culture and communication inform and re-inform each other. Communication processes characterized by gender-exclusionary practices and content that glorifies hypermasculinity or  hyperfemininity, for instance, inform a logic that accepts skewed gender power relations and the resultant  injustices as natural, normal, therefore beyond reproach.

This brings us to questions about the state of communication rights from a gender perspective, and the status of communication rights for different groups of women in particular. Communication rights are essential human rights that enable democratic participation, the exercise of civil and cultural rights, and access to, use and contribution to knowledge.

It is perhaps easier to understand the status of communication rights for women (as an undifferentiated category) by considering the findings of the Global Media Monitoring Project (GMMP) on gender in the world news media. The research carried out over the period 1995 to 2010 reveals a continued marked communication rights deficit for women in general, with a snail's pace progress to closing the gap.

Complicating the "gender" concept to bring into view intersectional identities determined by class, race, ethnicity, sexuality or other differences would reveal a communication rights deficit that becomes more acute the further away a group is located from the core of dominant power structures.

Awareness about different aspects of women's communication rights has grown remarkably during the past two decades. Civil society initiatives at the same time continue to break new ground, and the current issue of Media & Gender Monitor (MGM) profiles illustrative work by WACC’s project partners in Asia, Africa, Latin America and Eastern Europe.

Vigilance is necessary to ensure that communication rights, for women and marginalized groups especially, secure space and remain on the agenda in the processes underway, in the lead up to the 2015 events of the Beijing +20 review, adoption of a post - 2015 development framework and the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) 15 - year review.

I hope that the current issue of MGM inspires you to step up efforts to raise the prominence of women’s communication rights concerns in the ongoing agenda - setting debates.

From Media & Gender Monitor, No. 24 July 2013, Towards 2015: A Communication Rights Agenda
Image credit:  Vu Viet Thanh for the Research Centre for Gender, Family and Environment in Development (CGFED), Vietnam. "The purpose of communication is not only to provide information, but also to orient public opinion".

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Media & Gender Monitor
WACC, 308 Main Street
Toronto, Ontario, M4C 4X7
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gmmp@waccglobal.org
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