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Introduction to Community Radio Bianca Miglioretto Radio and

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Title: Introduction to Community Radio Bianca Miglioretto Radio and


1
Transfromative Potential of Community Radio
Bianca Miglioretto Radio and Alternative Media
OfficerIsis International-Manila
2
Radio as a Medium of Mass Communication
Advantages of radio
  • Most households have a radio receiver.

3
Radio as a Medium of Mass Communication
Advantages of radio
  • For Audiences
  • Radio penetrates even the poorest of households,
    and remote communities
  • It exercises audience imagination
  • It is useful to even those who have no formal
    education, and even the blind
  • Listening can be combined with other activities
  • It is direct, personal, and warm.
  • For Practitioners
  • It is fast.
  • Easy to learn and produce.
  • Relatively cheap.

4
Radio as a Medium of Mass Communication
Disadvantages of radio
  • People hear the program only once.

5
Radio as a Medium of Mass Communication
Disadvantages of radio
  • For Audiences
  • People hear the program only once.
  • Listeners cannot see anything.
  • For Practitioners
  • Limited in time.
  • Limited feedback mechanisms.
  • Extra effort on the practitioners to capture
    audience attention
  • Limited monitoring. There is no guarantee that
    we are reaching our audience

6
Important when broadcasting
  • Premises
  • Radio is the medium of the imagination
  • Our listeners have their own association for
    things that they hear
  • Tasks
  • Draw sound pictures to trigger the imagination
  • Our message must be very clear, leaving no doubts

7
Important when broadcasting
  • Premises
  • People hear newscasts only once, they cannot
    rewind or read again
  • The radio goes straight into the listeners
    private sphere
  • Tasks
  • We need to repeat basic information
  • We need to talk as if we were conversing with a
    friend

8
Important when broadcasting
  • Tasks
  • We need to simplify numbers. Example 1,054,358
    pesos is described as over 1 million pesos
  • We need to use easy and clear language so that
    they can follow even while doing something else
  • Premises
  • Graphs and numbers will be difficult to present.
  • As listening is combined with other activities,
    we only have half their attention

9
The Broadcasting Industry
1. Public Broadcasting A broadcasting service
provided by a statutory body, usually
state-funded but publicly-owned, which means that
it is run independently from the government and
its budget is determined through parliament. 2.
Commercial Broadcasting A private
broadcasting service operated for profit and
controlled privately by independent commercial
groups or individuals.
10
The Broadcasting Industry
3. Community Broadcasting A broadcasting
service not for profit, owned and controlled by a
particular community under an association,
cooperative or foundation. In some instances it
can be owned by non-governmental organisations
working in communities.
  • Examples
  • Religious Radio
  • Campus Radio
  • Rural Radio
  • Barangay Radio
  • Ethnic Minority Radio
  • Women's radio
  • Peace Radio
  • Environmental Radio
  • Youth Radio
  • Migrant Radio

11
What is Community Radio?
12
As Defined by Experience
  • ''The historical philosophy of community radio is
    to use this medium as the voice of the voiceless,
    the mouth-piece of oppressed people (be it on
    radial, gender, or class grounds) and generally
    as a tool for development.
  • Community radio is defined as having three
    aspects non-profit making, community ownership
    and control, community participation.
  • It should be made clear that community radio is
    not about doing something for the community but
    about the community doing something for itself,
    ie. owning and controlling its own means of
    communication.''
  • "What is Community Radio? A resource guide".
  • AMARC Africa and Panos Southern Africa. 1998

13
As Defined by Experience
  • Community and civic radio incorporates new
    languages, new formats, other sounds, types of
    music, voices. It brings other ways of talking,
    new relationships with listeners, ways of asking
    and answering questions, ways of making demands
    and pressuring the authorities.''
  • "Gestiòn de la radio comunitaria y ciudadana".
    Claudia Villamayor y Ernesto Lamas.
  • AMARC y Friedrich Ebert Stiftung. 1998
  • Community Radio is characterised by the active
    participation of the community in the process of
    creating news, information, entertainment and
    culturally relevant material, with an emphasis on
    local issues and concerns.
  • Community radio programming is designed by the
    community, to improve social conditions and the
    quality of its cultural life. The community
    itself decides what its priorities and needs are
    in terms of information provision.''
  • VOICES. India.

14
What is Community Radio?
  • A community radio station is one that is operated
    in the community, for the community, about the
    community and by the community. The community
    can be territorial or geographical - a township,
    village, district or island. It can also be a
    group of people with common interests, who are
    not necessarily living in one defined territory.
    Consequently, community radio can be managed or
    controlled by one group, by combined groups, or
    of people such as women, children, farmers,
    fisher, folk, ethnic groups, or senior citizens.
  • How to do community Radio by UNESCO. 2002

15
Characteristicsof Community Radio
Non-profit The radio can carry commercials, but
all income is for the radio station and no profit
goes to individuals or commercial
groups. Community-owned Collective ownership by
the immediate beneficiaries of the radio station
by an Association, Cooperative, Foundation or NGO
with democratic structures and elected
leadership. Serves one or several
communities Programs are selected according to
the interests and needs of the community. Not
according to commercial, government, politicians
or individual interests. Large part of the
programs are locally produced and discuss local
issues.
16
Characteristicsof Community Radio
Participatory Members of the community are
involved in the leadership of the radio, in the
broadcasting and programme production. They have
access to the airwaves.
Alternative to Mainstream Radio Community Radios
usually have very limited resources, so if we try
to be like the commercial or public radio we risk
to be just a cheap copy. Community Radio have
more editorial freedom so it is the challenge to
use this space creatively to make a difference
that people appreciate.
17
Principles of Community Radio
  • Access
  • Participation
  • Self-Management
  • Community Mandate
  • Accountability

18
Sustainability of Community Radio
  • Community Support
  • Fund-raising for its Eestablishment
  • Fund-raising for operation and maintenance
  • Membership fees (in kind or money)?
  • Block timers of LGUs and NGOs
  • Small paid messages (greetings, etc.)?
  • Fund-raising activities (bazaar, raffles,
    concerts, etc.)?
  • Studio rental
  • Training
  • Merchandising items

19
Community Radio within the Philippine Context
  • The language issue will be addressed with the
    introduction of community stations, given the
    different local languages and dialects.
  • It addresses human and civil rights issues trough
    the right to information and communication.
  • It may be able to bridge the digital divide and
    can offer some form of media education, thereby
    creating an information culture.
  • It enhances the emancipation and self-worth of
    communities, specially the women.

20
Community Radio within the Philippines Context?
  • It can provide a venue for exchange of ideas
    through debates, dialogues. This is important
    in processes of reconciliation and peace
    building.
  • It preserves cultural identity With the
    globalisation of information, community radio can
    offer communities a cheap but vital way of
    protecting their language and heritage.

21
How can Community Radio Promote Women,
Participation, Communication
22
Framework Women, Participation and
Communication
Table from the book Gender in the Information
Society by UNDP-APDIP 2006
23
Framework Women, Participation and
Communication
Table from the book Gender in the Information
Society by UNDP-APDIP 2006
24
Women as Stakeholders of Information and
Communication
  • Recognises womens need for struggle and change
    at the same time recognising womens role as
    producers of new meanings
  • Provides the venue to introduce different facets
    of womens perspective, participation,
    contribution and involvement (Unearthing Womens
    Untold Stories)?

25
Women as Stakeholders of Information and
Communication
  • Creates spaces to speak about issues of
    oppression gender, race, class and other
    oppressions, issues of conflict
  • Provides the opportunity to sharpen skills in
    media, information, communication and technology
    (Hands-on Training)
  • Creates spaces for the production of new and
    alternative meanings (Vocabularies of Equality
    and Peace)?

26
Opportunities for Women
  • Majority of radio listeners are women Community
    Radio can inform them better on local issues of
    interest to them.
  • Women can produce their own programmes In
    mainstream media women's programmes are mostly
    determined by commercial interests targeting
    women

as consumers of cosmetics, fashion and
groceries. If women produce their own programmes
they can discuss any issue from their
perspective.
27
Opportunities for Women
  • Empowerment of Women
  • Information means power. The better informed
    women are, the more they can participate in
    family and community affairs.
  • If women talk over the radio and produce their
    own program, they participate actively in civil
    society.
  • They receive more recognition by their family and
    the community.

28
Opportunities for Women
  • Women can change patriarchal values
    and images of women in the media.
  • Too often women are being portrayed as helpless
    victims, sex objects, ignorant, etc.
  • Women's valuable contribution to society is
    usually ignored.
  • Women's work in the family, in the community is
    usually ignored.
  • Women's opinion and their contribution at work is
    usually underestimated.
  • Community Radio can give women a strong and
    powerful voice.
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