[WSIS CS-Plenary] Community Media statement - endorsements invited
Steve Buckley
steve at commedia.org.uk
Fri Sep 12 21:50:02 BST 2003
Dear all
Attached and below is a statement on the draft Declaration and Action Plan
produced by the WSIS Community Media Working Group for Prepcom 3.
We are seeking endorsements to this statement from civil society
organisations. All endorsements received by Monday 15 September 12.00 noon
(UTC/GMT) will be included in the published version for distribution to
delegates at Prepcom 3.
Endorsements can be sent to cm at wsis-cs.org. We also invite other civil
society caucuses to incorporate the key points of this statement.
Steve Buckley
///
World Summit on the Information Society
WSIS Prepcom 3, Geneva 15-26 September 2003
WSIS Community Media Working Group
FINAL VERSION (open for endorsements, 11 September 2003)
Community Media and the Information Society
Statement on the draft Declaration and Action Plan
A just and equitable information society strategy must be people-centred,
inclusive, built on fundamental human rights and focused primarily on the
reduction of poverty. Traditional and new means of communication must be
focused on creating opportunities for people and communities to participate
in shaping their own destiny.
Much is promised by the information society - access to vital knowledge for
health and education, better information from governments and corporations,
electronic democracy, global trade and exchange, up to the minute news. But
the world's poorest communities face the danger of being left out. The
communication needs of poor people are compromised at the highest levels by
a vastly unequal access to the global communications environment and by the
absence of structural measures and commitments to redress past imbalances.
Free and universal access to basic education and affordable access to
electricity are required before the world's poorest people can benefit from
new ICTs. Nearly one third of the world's population still do not have
reliable access to electricity. Basic literacy skills are lacking for 20
per cent of the world's population, especially women and girls. The most
widespread and accessible communications technologies remain the
traditional media, particularly radio - an oral medium, low cost and
receivable by 90 per cent of the world's population. And the most effective
approaches to poverty reduction are community-driven and empowerment oriented.
Community media are thus a vital means to enable public participation, to
strengthen cultural and linguistic diversity, to promote gender equity and
to bring about a more just and equitable information society that includes
the voices of the poor and the marginalised. We urge this be reflected in
the WSIS Declaration and Action Plan.
In particular, we are calling on government delegations to WSIS Prepcom 3
to make the following improvements:
In the draft Declaration
- include reference to the specific and crucial role of community media
In the draft Action Plan
- strengthen commitment to community broadcasting in country level legislation
- strengthen commitment to spectrum allocation for community broadcasting
- support the establishment of an international Community Media Fund
Comments and Proposals on the draft Declaration (version 18 July 2003)
In the draft Declaration of Principles, paragraph 51 has not yet been
adequately formulated to reflect the essential role of media in the
provision of information and communication, nor does it reflect media
diversity and the importance of public service broadcasting and community
media. Freedom of expression is also worryingly compromised by phrases such
as "in accordance with the legal system in each country" which represent
an unacceptable weakening to the provisions of Article 19 of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR).
The Declaration of Principles requires a much clearer statement on the
media, based on respect for the provisions of Article 19 of the UDHR and
recognising the importance of a diverse and pluralist media environment
including public service broadcasting and community media. This would
provide firmer foundations for the following series of points that we
consider should be made as specific commitments in the WSIS Action Plan.
Comments and Proposals on the draft Action Plan (version 22 August 2003)
We warmly welcome paragraph 6b in the draft Action Plan:
"6b) Public service broadcasting and community media have specific and
crucial roles to play in ensuring the participation of all in the
information society."
We are also encouraged by commitments in paragraphs 27, 41 and 42 of the
Action Plan:
"27a) Governments should support a generous allocation of frequencies for
local radio stations at affordable prices."
"41f) Give recognition and support to media based in local communities and
support projects combining the use of traditional media and new technologies."
"42f) Encourage investment in regional and community-based media content as
well as new technologies."
Nevertheless we believe these statements can and should be strengthened.
The statement in paragraph 6b) should be reflected in an improved
Declaration of Principles and the commitments in the Action Plan need to be
more specific and measurable.
Country level legislation
The major barrier to the development of community broadcasting services, is
the country level legislative and regulatory framework. Many countries
provide specific legislative and regulatory frameworks that encourage
community broadcasters. Others retain legislative or regulatory systems
that restrict freedom of expression by preventing or discouraging local
communities from establishing their own community broadcasting services.
The draft Action Plan sets specific targets for access to the information
society including, for example, a commitment to Internet access in every
village by 2010 and in every school by 2015. These commitments, if
realised, would give the world's literate population access to global
information resources and communications capacity. They need to be balanced
by investment in the local communications infrastructure, recognising that
for the poorest people radio will continue to be the dominant source of
information.
We propose the WSIS should set specific targets for the opening up of
broadcast licensing to allow for the operation of community broadcasting
services in every community by 2010 and to ensure all of the world's
population can access community broadcasting services by 2015.
Spectrum allocation
The draft Action Plan recognises (paragraph 27a) the importance of access
to spectrum for local radio services but it includes no specific targets
nor does it address the importance of managing the radio spectrum in the
public interest to ensure a diversity of services.
The Action Plan should include an explicit commitment to ensure the
radio-frequency spectrum is recognised as a natural resource belonging to
all humanity and that should be managed in the public interest as a
publicly owned asset through transparent and accountable regulatory
frameworks. Regulation should ensure equitable access to spectrum among a
plurality of media including sufficient capacity reserved for community media.
We propose the WSIS should set specific targets for the reservation of
spectrum to enable community broadcasting services in every community by 2010.
Community Media Fund
The draft Action Plan proposes a global ICTs for Development Fund but
leaves open how such a Fund would be deployed. There has been a strong
focus in the WSIS draft Declaration and Action Plan on building the
infrastructure, generally taken to mean the telecommunications
infrastructure for local and international connectivity. Private sector
infrastructure and content providers and some donor governments have a
strong interest in promoting public investment in infrastructure
particularly where this opens up new markets.
This is unlikely to address the needs of the poorest, mainly rural
communities, who face barriers of literacy, electricity supply and
affordable consumer equipment. A substantial portion of any investment in
ICTs for poverty reduction must be ring-fenced for community-driven
development and community communications initiatives based on the
principles of empowerment, inclusion, sustainability and appropriate
technology.
We propose the Action Plan should include a commitment to establish a
Community Media Fund by 2006. The Fund would support new community radio
development and community media content including projects that make
provision for the poorest communities, for cultural and lingistic diversity
and for the equal participation of women and girls. The Fund should also
support community projects that combine the use of traditional media and
new communication technologies. The Fund should be established through a
donor - civil society partnership involving leading community media
organisations and civil society organisations working in this field.
Endorsements received so far:
African Women's Development and Communications Network (FEMNET), Asociación
Latinoamericana de Educación Radiofónica (ALER), APC Latin American
Committee ICT Policy Monitor Project, APC Women's Networking Support
Programme, Association for Progressive Communications (APC), Catholic Media
Council (CAMECO), Community Media Association (UK), Foundation for Media
Alternatives (Philippines), GreenNet (UK), Heinrich Boell Foundation
(Germany), Hitec Aztec Communications Network, International Association of
Women in Radio and Television - Ghana Chapter, Knowledge and Rights with
Young People through Safer Spaces (KRYSS), Korean Progressive Network -
Jinbonet, LaNeta (Mexico), La Peña Cultural Center (USA), Rede de
Informações para o Terceiro Setor (RITS, Brazil), Women's International
News Gathering Service (WINGS), World Association of Community Radio
Broadcasters (AMARC)
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: Prepcom 3 - CM statement final.rtf
Type: application/rtf
Size: 14970 bytes
Desc: not available
Url : http://mailman-new.greennet.org.uk/pipermail/plenary/attachments/20030912/45a1d280/Prepcom3-CMstatementfinal.rtf
-------------- next part --------------
------------------------------------------------------------
steve at commedia.org.uk
------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.commedia.org.uk
------------------------------------------------------------
More information about the Plenary
mailing list