Project for Social Communication - Peru
- Advocacy and social mobilisation at the local and national levels to increase the support and use of social communications as a means to convey social messages.
- Technical assistance and capacity building among community members and the media to strengthen their abilities and knowledge related to social communication and children's and women's rights.
- Development of skills within the families and the communities by creating, from a human rights perspective, interventions and communication materials that are culturally appropriate and adapted to the needs of the population.
- Formulating culturally relevant messages based on the informational and learning needs of women and children regarding issues related to education, health, justice, and other basic services.
- Providing technical assistance to counterparts, local media, and different community-based organisations, including community child rights defence centres, teachers, and basic health providers, for the development of preventive plans and communication messages that have been validated by the population.
- Identifying local and national media allies and securing their commmitment to incorporating children's and women's rights and issues into their programming.
- Identifying the existing supply of media networks and settings for communication at the local level, and the value they are given.
- Supporting the incorporation of messages into communication outlets to ensure children's rights to health, nutrition, and basic education.
Rights, Children, Youth, Women.
The Project for Social Communication is part of the five-year Promotion and Monitoring of Rights Programme implemented by UNICEF-Peru in 2001. This programme operates at the national level in an effort to increase access to information about, knowledge of, and commitment to, the adoption and implementation of children's and women's rights. The programme includes two national projects in addition to this one: Promotion of the Rights of Children, Adolescents, and Women and The Information and Social Monitoring Project.
UNICEF-Peru; the Ministries of Health, Education and Justice; the Ministry of the Presidency; the Ministry for the Promotion of Women and Human Development (PROMUDEH); the Civil Defence agency; community-based organisations; the mass media and local, departmental and national communication networks; occupational associations in the media; inter-institutional networks such as the National Commission for the Rights of Girls, Boys and Adolescents; opinion leaders, academicians; international cooperation; and U.N. agencies.
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