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Archive for December, 2008

Local Radio: Policies and Legislation

Saturday, December 20th, 2008
An Ejti Stih painting was used for the poster 
Painting by Ejti Stih

The International Seminar “Local Radio in Latin America: Policies and Legislation” took place last 19-21 November 2008 in La Paz, Bolivia, at the Universidad Andina Simón Bolívar, one of the universities of this network. Fifteen international guests, specialists in the subject matter, attended, as well as one hundred Bolivian participants, among them communication professors and students, local radio stations journalists and managers, and representatives from development institutions.

Bolivian and international participants

Bolivian and international participants

Among the international participants, Cicilia Peruzzo (Brazil), Jose Ignacio Lopez Vigil (Cuba/Ecuador), Rosa María Alfaro (Perú), Jeanine ElGazi y Omar Rincón (Colombia), Thomas Tufte (Dinamarca), Christoph Dietz (Alemania), Aleida Calleja (México), and Gustavo Gómez (Uruguay).

Community radio in Latin America, a pioneer worldwide, has contributed in processes of peace and justice, in strengthening social movements and social organisations, and in the struggle for liberties and human development. Since they started late in the 1940s local radio stations were often born illegal, prompted by poor social sectors of society, and were socially legitimised because of their undeniable service to the public and the sectors they serve.

Video conference with Manuel Chaparro from Spain

Video conference with Manuel Chaparro from Spain

As time went by, the need for legal recognition of these independent local initiatives became more pressing, not only because of their social function but also as a means to meet the demand for the right to communicate with cultural and social pertinence, from spaces generated through state-owned, private and public media within the framework of democratic political systems.

Battles were fought throughout the region for the creation and/or revision of communication policies with a public service content, and legal frameworks and regulations that would recognise, protect and promote the development and operation of local media. National and regional organisations such as AMARC have leaded this movement.

Luis Ramiro Beltran

Luis Ramiro Beltran

In spite of it, both in Latin America and the world, very peculiar situations coexist depending on the political and social context of each nation. Some countries have taken the lead in designing policies and legislation for local radio (Uruguay, Colombia), whereas others lack of mechanisms protecting and promoting community media (Bolivia, Guatemala) or have enacted legislation that limit, instead of promoting, the exercise of communities right to communicate (Brazil, Chile).

Guimer Zambrana, Ana Limachi and Cicilia Peruzzo

Guimer Zambrana, Ana Limachi and Cicilia Peruzzo

The main objective of the seminar was to review the processes of political incidence favouring local media, and its degree of advancement, reflecting on the new political contexts that could strengthen, or weaken, the legitimacy of these media; as well as to draft recommendations on policies and legislation and present them to national authorities, relevant social sectors and other organizations.

During the week parallel activities were conducted: un documentary film cycle on local radio stations in various parts of the world, among which several Consortium video productions were shown, such as “Voices from the Magdalena” (Colombia) and “Women of Pastapur” (India); and the launching of the Spanish edition of “Antologia de Comunicación para el Cambio Social: Lecturas Históricas y Contemporaneas” at Plural Editores.

Congresman Antonio Peredo at the final plenary

Congresman Antonio Peredo at the final plenary

Based on recommendations from the working groups, a commission drafted the final document of the seminar, “Carta de La Paz” (Letter from La Paz), which was presented at the final plenary with attendance of Congressman Antonio Peredo Leigue. 

 

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The ANTOLOGIA in La Paz

Wednesday, December 10th, 2008

Jose Antonio Quiroga, Director of Plural, with Thomas Tufte and Luis Ramiro Beltran

The second launching –after Mexico last October- of the “Communication for Soial Change Anthology” took place in La Paz (Bolivia) as part of the International Seminar on Local Radio in Latin America: Policies and Legislation, on November 2oth 2008, at Plural Editores bookstore.

The presenters were former President of Bolivia Carlos D. Mesa, who also wrote the foreword, and Luis Ramiro Beltrán, one of the early pioneers of communication for development in Latin America. Both Alfonso Gumucio-Dagron and Thomas Tufte, the co-editors, were in attendance, as well as several authors such as Erick Torrico (Bolivia), Rosa María Alfaro (Peru) and Cicilia Peruzzo (Brazil).

Former President of Bolivia Carlos D. Mesa during his speech

Former President of Bolivia Carlos D. Mesa during his speech

Carlos D. Mesa mentioned that the title of the book was limited, since its content covers a much wider effort: “We could say that this is a universal anthology of communication, because it contains much more than what is specific to communication for development… This is a book of global features, the most complete, exhaustive and above all the most rigorous, as it gathers and interprets the views on communication for development since the criteria itself originated in the 1950s, until today”.

Luis Ramiro Beltran and Alfonso Gumucio at the launching in La Paz
Luis Ramiro Beltran and Alfonso Gumucio at the launching in La Paz

During his intervention Luis Ramiro Beltrán said: “The way texts are arranged, first those considered of historical value and then those of the contemporary debate, makes the reading very easy and helps to understand the evolution of the discipline as well as to absorb both the pioneering ideas and the current thinking. We can at the same time compare the contributions from various continents and within our own region… Can we ask for more? Think about the advantage that this brings to professors and students of the field, as well as researchers and historians”.