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Since the establishment of the Digital Broadcast Initiative
(DBI) with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP),
the United Nations Fund for International Partnerships (UNFIP)
and the United Nations Foundation (UNF) in August 2001, Equal
Access has strived to provide critically needed information
and education to poor communities in the developing world.
DBI provides access to locally produced, high-quality information
on topics that assist communities in advancing their own social
and economic development efforts. Starting with a focus on
HIV/AIDS and gender issues, including violence against women,
DBI broadens the impact of development activities towards
achieving the United Nations Millennium Development Goals
(MDGs).
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In coordination with UNDP, Equal Access' flexible, replicable
and scalable Project Methodology and Information and Communication
Technology (ICT) Platform for DBI is available at country
and regional levels, to provide vital information, education
and leadership training to even the most remote rural communities
through satellite and FM radio technology.
Since then, a number of UN agencies, as well as the United
States Agency for International Development (USAID) and private
foundations, have supported the DBI implementation in Nepal
(pilot country), Afghanistan and Cambodia. Additionally, small-scale
activities have been undertaken in India, the Lao People's
Democratic Republic and Tajikistan. Through these, Equal Access
shares its core expertise, in:
* Content creation-developing innovative "needs-driven"
programming that is culturally appropriate and incorporates
feedback directly from audiences.
* Information dissemination-implementing scalable
solutions that reach mass audiences, provide training or information
resources and are able to reach underserved/
remote populations.
* Community engagement-integrating communications
with on-the-ground development initiatives to maximize impact
through capacity-building, discussion groups, facilitated
learning, interactive feedback and evaluation.
DBI, a vibrant regional communications platform, over the
last four years, has been used by international development
agencies, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), content producers
and grass-roots communities to achieve positive social change
for millions of underserved people in Asia. While the strong
cross-cutting focus on HIV/AIDS prevention and women's and
girls' empowerment has continued, DBI has expanded to educate
communities on the role of law and justice in societies, human
rights, landmine awareness and agricultural information, etc.
And, importantly, six of the eight MDGs are being significantly
addressed through creative radio programming and community
outreach activities:
Goal 1: Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger: on livelihoods,
agriculture, animal husbandry, practical business skills.
Goal 2: Achieve universal primary education: on teachers'
training, early childhood development, basic education and
"Welcome to School" campaigns.
Goal 3: Promote gender equality and empower women:
on women's rights, anti-trafficking of girls, combating domestic
violence, girls' education, anti-forced and/or early marriage,
sexual and reproductive health and life skills.
Goal 5: Improve maternal health: on basic health education,
maternal health, sexual and reproductive health, including
links with service providers.
Goal 6: Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases:
on HIV/AIDS prevention, other health education, including
links with service providers.
Goal 8: Develop a partnership for global development:
many of the programmes are supported by a consortium of institutional
donors, development agencies and non-governmental organizations.
On 14 April 2006, DBI marked its three years of satellite
radio broadcasts in Nepal. Beginning with one flagship programme,
Khura Khasra Mitha (Let's Talk Straight), and a magazine-feature
programme, Khojkhabar, at the commencement of broadcasts on
14 April 2003, Equal Access now broadcasts twelve different
radio programmes on a channel known to the Nepalese audience
as Aphnai Mato, Aphnai Bato (Our Land, Our Path). Addressing
such topics as HIV/AIDS prevention, women's empowerment, peace
and governance, women's rights, education, safe migration
and life-skills training, the combined radio and outreach
programmes reach over 9 million Nepalese. Despite trying situations
in Nepal due to the escalating conflict, significant expansion
of outreach through new partners and new projects has continued.
"I saved my best friend's life, I saved her life!
I learned what trafficking is because of the broadcasts and
I knew my best friend would be a victim because she is very
beautiful. One day, I saw a man talking to her and I ran over.
I threw myself at my friend and said, 'How can you leave me?
Don't leave me here alone; I will never speak to you again
if you do.' Well, my friend stayed. I know I saved her life."
-Nirmala, Nepal
Youth programme SSMK star Binita surrounded
by fans in rural Nepal
In 2005, only two years after the launch of the DBI pilot
in Nepal, Equal Access began implementing the DBI Cambodia,
with the support of USAID. The flagship Cambodia programme,
"The Future is in Your Hands", will provide critical
information for youth and their families about the realities
of trafficking, while discussing alternative livelihood options
and integrating HIV/AIDS information. With the initial launch
of the project on 30 March 2006 reaching 300 communities throughout
Cambodia, Equal Access looks forward to its national scale-up
in the coming years.
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| A
young Cambodian girl greeting Equal Access field staff |
In establishing Radio Danesh (Knowledge Radio), Equal Access
created Afghanistan's largest rural communications infrastructure
with a satellite radio channel that broadcasts 7 1/2 hours
of social development programming daily, currently reaching
almost 7,000 rural communities and thousands more through
re-broadcasts on partner FM radio stations that have been
provided with satellite receivers. Equal Access creates and
broadcasts its own distance teacher training, the rule of
law, health and women's empowerment programmes, and many shows
that complement new or existing outreach activities.
"The effect of the radio-before, if someone killed
someone else, the shura decided that the sister should be
given to that family, or girls forced to be married. People
do not do that now. Not completely. But opinion has been changed
a lot, it is much less. This is Radio Danesh."
-Afghanistan
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| Teachers
are being trained on how to use satellite radios in Afghanistan. |
"This radio has a good effect in opening the minds
of the people. Before, people forced their daughters to get
married young-now they don't."
-a woman from Charikar, Afghanistan
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Partnership is one of the Digital Broadcast Initiative's greatest
success stories. Over the last four years, DBI has proven
to be an exemplary model of the MDG on "partnerships
for development". It has engaged a broad range of UN
agencies and other multilateral and bilateral organizations,
major foundations, NGOs, community-based organizations, government
ministries, universities and private donors in shared development
goals. UNFIP recognized the potential of DBI in 2001 and was
instrumental in working with UNDP and Equal Access to develop
the UNF seed grant that catalyzed project implementation.
Since that time, UNFIP and UNF have worked cooperatively with
Equal Access to present and recommend the project to a range
of public and private partners and donors. Both exhibited
pivotal leadership in assisting Equal Access to bring DBI
to scale through partnerships and inter-agency collaborations.
Perhaps most encouraging is the natural growth of partnerships
and the utilization of DBI by diverse organizations. The number
of high-profile partner organizations that are collaborating
with one another and with communities as a result of this
project is truly remarkable. Because of the focus on local
capacity-building, a further asset has been created. In each
country of operation there is now a strong consortium of local
radio producers, technical satellite experts and community
facilitation leaders that travel inter-regionally to provide
training and build local capacity in additional countries.
This has fostered a vibrant south-south commitment to using
the media to achieve social development gains.
It is rare to find a project with a broad vision and strength
of strategy to attract as many diverse partners as the UNDP/Equal
Access Digital Broadcast Initiative. All partners work towards
common objectives and derive benefits from participation.
It should be noted that because of the "Content Advisory
Group" and the "Interactive Feedback Loop"
methodologies, DBI has been particularly well integrated with
its community beneficiaries on the ground. Indeed, by recording
voices from the field and surveying listening groups, communities
are partners in requesting, creating and refining the information
and education that best suit them in improving their lives.
Through direct implementation and at national and international
conferences, DBI has played a strong advocacy role in using
media and innovative ICT solutions to address a range of MDGs.
At a time when UN agencies and Governments are increasingly
focused on the Millennium Development targets, this project
has successfully developed a range of methodologies and best
practices that allow Governments and international development
agencies to maximize social change at the grass-roots level.
DBI has proven it could be replicated in a variety of countries
and be implemented effectively at scale. The model created
through the UNF/UNFIP/UNDP/Equal Access partnership has won
the NASDAQ Education Award at the Tech Awards in Silicon Valley,
California, which has been covered in numerous press articles
and featured at the World Summit in Information Society in
Geneva. Equal Access has successfully matched the UNF challenge
grant, raising over $2 million in private and public funds
to match the UNF contribution of $1million, a total of $3
million in funding for the project's activities. DBI will
continue to stand as a model for replication throughout the
region and elsewhere in the world.
While the formal DBI project will close on 31 July 2006,
the country initiatives it launched have moved forward to
achieve sustainability and long-term viability. DBI Nepal
and Afghanistan, and soon Cambodia, have achieved national
impact and are positioned to continue providing vital social
development information and education to support positive
social change for years to come. Each project builds local
capacity to locate funding sources for continuing provision
of valuable communications and outreach services.
DBI provides a powerful example of the synergistic capacity
of innovative media programming, the cutting edge ICT solutions
and direct community engagement to catalyze change at the
community, national and regional levels. Based on these accomplishments,
Equal Access will continue its work with UNDP and other partners
to apply this model for use in developing countries to create
positive change for millions of people and assist in the achievement
of the MDGs. It also intends to further build on best practices
and methodologies developed through DBI, to provide regional
training, workshops and initiatives that focus on using the
media, innovative ICT applications and community outreach
strategies to promote positive social change.
This is part of a series of articles exploring the many facets
of partnerships supported by the United Nations Fund for International
Partnerships (UNFIP). In the series, some of the UN private
sector and foundation partners will convey their views on
how partnerships with the United Nations are being built and
are achieving impact on the ground.
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