the history and development of participatory communication in tanzania thomas tuftethomas tufte...

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The history and development The history and development of of participatory communication participatory communication in Tanzania in Tanzania Thomas Tufte Thomas Tufte Roskilde University, Denmark Roskilde University, Denmark [email protected] Presentation given at IAMCR Conference 18-22 July Presentation given at IAMCR Conference 18-22 July 2010, 2010, Braga, Portugal Braga, Portugal

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Page 1: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

The history and development The history and development ofof

participatory communication participatory communication in Tanzaniain Tanzania

Thomas TufteThomas Tufte

Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

[email protected]

Presentation given at IAMCR Conference 18-22 July 2010, Presentation given at IAMCR Conference 18-22 July 2010,

Braga, PortugalBraga, Portugal

Page 2: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

PresentationPresentation

• The Research Project

• Entry Points: Governance and Citizenship, Public Sphere and Human (In)Security

• Case: The history of participatory communication

Page 3: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

Research QuestionResearch Question

• How can civil society driven media and communication initiatives- in the digital era - enhance processes of empowerment and ultimately good governance?

Page 4: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

People Speaking Back? Media, empowerment and People Speaking Back? Media, empowerment and democracy in East Africademocracy in East Africa

• 2009-2013

• Collaborative Research: 6 interlinked research projects (3 universities: Univ.of Dar es Salaam, Univ. of Nairobi and Roskilde University)

• My project:

Page 5: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

Entry pointsEntry points

• Civil society – gaining visibilty, articulating change and obtaining political influence (Porto Alegre Partic.budget + Social For.)

• Citizens – (dis)connections with orgs and movements

• Stakeholders: government, decision-makers

• Media and communication contents and outlets: visibility, networking and pol.action

Page 6: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

Analytical PerspectivesAnalytical Perspectives

• human security: relates to both material and immaterial conditions of existence. Is deeply connected to questions of identity, community and subjectivity

• Mediapolis: a mediated public sphere, a space which hosts both possibilities and limitations for the cultivation of civic action and participation. It includes the flows of media and communication practices

• Citizenship: a multi-dimensional concept which includes the agencies, identities and actions of people themselves

Page 7: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

Enacting citizenship Enacting citizenship Social Movements and Insurgent PoliticsSocial Movements and Insurgent Politics

• ‘in a world marked by the rise of mass self-communication, social movements and insurgent politics have a the chance to enter the public space from multiple sources. By using both horizontal communication networks and mainstream media to convey their images and messages, they increase their chances of enacting social and political change – even if they start from a subordinate position in institutional power, financial resources, or symbolic legitimacy’ (Castells 2009. 302)

Page 8: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

Disjunctions of CitizenshipDisjunctions of Citizenshipperspectives for my analysisperspectives for my analysis

• Exploring political projects versus reality of lived lives, and the role of media and communication herein

• A ’humanity’ perspective (raised human integration to the level of humanity (Bauman 2010)

• The social cost of globalisation: ’Locals by fate rather than choice’ (Bauman 2000)

• Glocal agency in contexts of ’failed states’. A global ’social state’ (NGOs rather that states engaging)

Page 9: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

Disjunctions of CitizenshipDisjunctions of Citizenship- the ménage of exclusion- the ménage of exclusion

• ‘the state is today unable, and/or unwilling, to promise its subjects existential security (‘freedom from fear’, as Franklin D. Roosevelt famously phrased it) (Bauman 2010: 65)’. When the state acts in this way, the individual citizen is left to his own, unable to obtain existential security, that is unable to obtain and retain ‘a legitimate and dignified place in human society and avoiding the ménage of exclusion’ (Bauman).

Page 10: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

MediápolisMediápolis- a mediated space of appearance- a mediated space of appearance

• The polis, properly speaking, is not the city-state in its physical location: it is the organisation of the people as it arises out of acting and speaking together, and its true space lies between people living together for this purpose, no matter where they happen to be… (Arendt 1958; 198)

Page 11: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

MediápolisMediápolis- a global civil space- a global civil space

• a new cosmopolitan critical theory of the emerging global civil society and its contradictions

• Embryonic and imperfect, but a necessary starting point for the creation of a more effective global civil space

Page 12: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

MediápolisMediápolis – a communication practice – a communication practice

• A comunication practice based on:

a)A mutuality of responsibility between producer and receiver;

b)A degree of reflexivity by all participants in the communication and;

c)A recognition of cultural difference

A dialogic space of potential and possibility..

Page 13: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

emerging questions..emerging questions..

• What reality is created in this mediated space of appearance?

• What kind of publicness is this, and where is it enacted?

• What relation exists between online and offline media and comm practices?

How do ordinary citizens engage as participants in the mediated public sphere of mediápolis?

Page 14: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

Human SecurityHuman Security

• Human security as freedom from fear describes a condition of existence in which human dignity is realized, embracing not only physical safety but going beyond that to include meaningful participation in the life of the community, control over one’s life and so forth (…)Thus, while material sufficiency lies at the core of human security, in addition the concept encompasses non-material dimensions to form a qualitative whole. In other words, human security embraces the whole gamut of rights, civil and political, economic and social, and cultural (Thomas 2007: 108-109)

Page 15: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

Human (In)SecurityHuman (In)Securityaims with this conceptaims with this concept

• The subjective position from which people speak and act

• Conditions of existence fundamental of agency and communiction

• Helps us understand the social reality citizens live in, and the socio-physic situation this reality produces

• Helps produce a parameter for the quality and scope of civil society driven media and communication initiatives

Page 16: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

Research QuestionResearch Questiononce againonce again

• How can civil society driven media and communication initiatives- in the digital era - enhance processes of empowerment and ultimately good governance?

• Explored in the intersection of mediápolis, citizenship and human (in)security

Page 17: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

Research Project: MEDIResearch Project: MEDIeeAA(Media, Empowerment and Democracy in East Africa)(Media, Empowerment and Democracy in East Africa)

• Kenya + Tanzania, 2009-2013, team of 6 researchers, including two media ethnographic PhD-students, urban + rural fieldwork sites

Tanzania Case:• Femina HIP• Health Info for youth• Reach: 25% of all Tanzanians

Page 18: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

Case: Femina HIP Case: Femina HIP ObjectivesObjectives

To build supportive environments in Tanzania where:

• Young people in their communities enjoy their right to access information & services and are empowered to make positive informed choices around sexuality and lead healthy lifestyles in order to reduce the negative impact of HIV/AIDS.

Page 19: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

Case: Femina HIP Case: Femina HIP ObjectivesObjectives

To build supportive environments in Tanzania where:

• Communities exercise their right to express themselves, participate in public debate & engage in civil society. (Femina HIP Logical Framework, 2007)

Page 20: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

Tanzanian ContextTanzanian Context

• Stil low – but now growing- levels of participation in public life and decision-making

• Weak civil society – but is changing

• Low/weak media infrastructure

• Femina HIP became a visible NGO early on

Page 21: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

FEMAFEMA

• FEMA. A glossy magazine, 64 pages, 150.000 copies (rising to 170.000 by end of 2008). Published 4 x a year. Targets youth aged 15-24 especially secondary school students in every region of the country

Page 22: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

SiMchezoSiMchezo

• Si Mchezo! 32 pages, 140.000 copies.

• 6 x a year. Targets out of school youth and their communities particularly in rural areas.

• Will rise to 250.000 by end of 2008.

Page 23: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

Other Media OutletsOther Media Outlets

• Pilika Pilika. A radio soap opera. Carries messages from Femina as well as two other organisations. Airs on national radio 4 times a week.

• FEMA Tv Talk Show. Half ½ hour talk show. Broadcasts on national TV 4 times a week. Mobile phones are used for feedback and voting, particularly around the TV.

• ChezaSalama (‘play safe’). Interactive website with a series of activities and information in English and Swahili. First of its kind in Tanzania.

• A Facebook site – recently created

• Blogging - a Femina Club is doing it, but not explored yet..

• Individual Publications: Range of specialist publications produced on for example HIV-testing.

Page 24: The history and development of participatory communication in Tanzania Thomas TufteThomas Tufte Roskilde University, DenmarkRoskilde University, Denmark

ChallengesChallenges

• To apply this conceptual framework in the empirical analysis (exploring media uses in/for the articulation of (deliberative?) spaces of everyday life

• Studying ’agency’, space and feelings of ’human insecurity’ in practice

• Identifying the relation between on-line and off-line practices