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The right to freedom of expression...includ[es] the freedom to seek, receive, and impart information and ideas of all kinds ...These rights and freedoms are among those which give meaning to the right to participate effectively in a free society. United Nations Commission on Human Rights, April 17, 2001 chart by John Havey |
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The turn of the twenty-first century occasioned the turning of many descriptive phrases: the information age, the telecommunications age, the technology age. Today more people have access to more information, transmitted by a wider array of telecommunication technologies, than ever before. That's the good news. |
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The bad news is twofold. First, the gap between the information-rich and the information-poor has widened greatly. Second, what, when, and how information is distributed is controlled increasingly by a small and shrinking number of large corporations. For example, AOL, the world's largest Internet provider, has merged with the Time-Warner book, magazine, and cable empire. Someday Time-Warner might stop carrying NBC's cable news channel since it competes with CNN, its own cable channel. In many countries, national governments control all the news media. Some governments prevent citizens from having access to external media. Access to information is essential to the mission of the General Board of Global Ministries (GBGM). In 1998, the GBGM's general secretary, Dr. Randolph Nugent, began to focus on the need for appropriate technology, such as radio, to carry the Gospel and the United Methodist mission message around the world. It had become clear that, even as new technologies were flooding the markets in developed countries, many people around the world still had no access to the older technologies. With Dr. Nugent's leadership and the support of the GBGM directors, a strategy for using appropriate technology has emerged and continues to evolve. In a speech at the annual meeting of the World Association of Christian Communicators in June 2000, Dr. Nugent reported: "We find ourselves at a time when, not only are we experiencing globalization and domination, but also choices are being made about who the players and participants will be in communications, the economy, and the society ... Questions are being raised about who will be denied the privilege and the opportunity and who will have to be given assistance in order to participate. |
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Sharon Maeda (pointing) and staff members of GBGM Communications discuss a new page for the GBGM website. |
"In a time such as ours, when we have to grapple with issues such as privacy, communications control, police surveillance, and censorship...the diversity and the pluralism so very necessary to accurate reporting are gradually being eroded....A certain sameness concerning the information provided was beginning to be a problem even when ownership of the media was dispersed. It is even more so now that ownership and control of the media are becoming centralized." |
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A year after the Mozambique floods, five students from the Robert Wagner Graduate School of Public Service at New York University teamed up with students from Eduardo Mondlane University in Maputo to assess the usefulness of the radios. Their research showed that 79 percent of the people said they could not afford to purchase radio batteries, making self-powered radios a very important tool. An astounding 50 percent said they discussed with others the information they heard on the radiowhich bodes well for the dissemination of data about health and for the spread of religious education. The students also found that the Mozambicans used radios for sending personal messages, much as telephones are used. This points up the need for locally produced programming. Funding for self-powered radios: At the final meeting of the 1997-2000 quadrennium, GBGM directors were each given a self-powered radio to use as an interpretive tool. All were asked to raise funds for the radios, which cost $50 apiece. In addition, GBGM staff promoted the radios at jurisdictional and annual-conference events. Thanks to the commitment and creativity of those former directors and dedicated staff, more than $40,000 has been raised for radio purchase and distribution to date. Radio Africa International: A column in the March-April issue of New World Outlook described "Radio Africa International," the GBGM's daily shortwave radio program. Given situations that might endanger broadcasters or hamper free radio programming in Africasuch as civil wars or government censorshipthe GBGM decided to produce the program at its studios in New York. Drawing upon the wealth of African resources in the New York area and involving visiting African bishops and others from the continent, a staff of three produces this daily program. Soon they will be joined by correspondents from all over Africa. At present, the program broadcasts for four hours a daytwo hours in English and two in French. Future plans include producing the same program in Portuguese. Eventually, at least part of the program production will move to a safe and accessible location on the African continent. |
| Low-powered radio: Recently the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) decided to license 10- to 100-watt radio stations to nonprofit organizations. Seeing this as a good opportunity for inner city, ethnic, and poor rural communities to have their own voice, the GBGM joined with ecumenical partners and other community-based organizations to advocate for these frequencies and to encourage United Methodist institutions to apply for them. |
Cyclones hit Mozambique two years in a row, causing major damage and loss of life and property across much of the country. |
| With increased staff support, the GBGM website is becoming more user-friendly. It will soon provide an interactive web experience by offering an integrated source of information that is easily accessible, simple to use, quick to load (even with slower connections), and rich in content. This site will continue to reflect a well-informed, interactive United Methodist mission and ministry that, being online, can be shared by the entire "connected" world. United Methodist churches on the Web: The GBGM hosts local United Methodist churches on a dedicated server, providing the churches with free websites. What began as a handful of churches on the GBGM server has grown to more than 7100 local churches, along with annual conferences, district offices, units of United Methodist Women and United Methodist Men, and United Methodist youth groups. GBGM staff members provide technical support and a useful newsletter to the users. The church sites will soon be linked with and integrated into the GBGM website. Community networks: Today, nearly 50 percent of the homes in the United States have computers. In addition, schools, libraries, and community centers are building open computer facilities to give more people access to the web. Thus it is becoming viable for local communities to share information via a website. The technology allows for the streaming of audio and video messages as well as text and graphic images. It also provides a connection for people who are isolated from each other. Where low-power radio will not go (because of signal interference in major markets or the lack of an FCC license), a simple computer connected to a telephone can provide communication within a neighborhood or with the world. The McGannon School of Communications at Fordham University has conducted a study on the viability of local United Methodist churches becoming the hub of such community networks. Global Mission Learning Centers: The GBGM is also working to find funding partners to provide computer technology in communities where the costs are prohibitive. In the United States, large technology corporations are putting such resources in select, usually heavily populated communities, ignoring the needs of rural areas and developing countries. By late 2001, the GBGM will have launched initial sites in at least three countries. |
| Sharon Maeda is the Associate General Secretary for
Mission Communication at the General Board of Global Ministries.
Text and photographs copyright 2001 by New World Outlook: The Mission Magazine of The United Methodist Church. Used by Permission. For reprint permission, contact New World Outlook by E-mail at nwo@gbgm-umc.org. |