Development action with informed and engaged societies

After nearly 28 years, The Communication Initiative (The CI) Global is entering a new chapter. 

Following a period of transition, the global website has been transferred to the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits) in South Africa, where it will be administered by the Social and Behaviour Change Communication Division. Wits' commitment to social change and justice makes it a trusted steward for The CI's legacy and future. 

On the transfer, co-founder Victoria Martin expressed her pleasure to see this work continue under Wits' leadership, knowing that co-founder Warren Feek (1953–2024) would have felt deep pride in The CI Global's Africa-led direction. 

As Wits, we honour the team and partners who sustained The CI for decades and look forward building from that strong base. This includes co-founders Warren Feek (1953-2024) and Victoria Martin as well as La Iniciativa de Comunicación (CILA), which continues independently at lainiciativadecomunicacion.com with links to The CI Global site. We are also eager to forge new partnerships and entertain new ideas as we consider how best to contribute to social and behaviour change in our rapidly evolving environment.

If you are joining the International Social and Behaviour Change Communication (SBCC) Summit in Panama, please join Wits and CILA on Monday, 22 June, to share your thoughts and suggestion for the relaunch of the Communication Initiative. We will be in Pacifica 5 from 12-1:25 for the Refuel, Reflect, and Renew Lunch Series: The Communication Initiative: celebrating a driving force for Communication for Social Change and the way forward. We will reflect on the legacy of Warren Feek and family in creating the Communication Initiative, consider the contributions of CI over the years and then turn our attention towards the future in this dynamic session. 

If you are unable to join us in Panama, we still want to hear from you. Please contribute your thoughts by following this link: https://redcap.link/CommunicationInitiative2026 or reaching out to ci_surveys@commint.com

You can also follow the QR Code:

 https://redcap.link/CommunicationInitiative2026

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"Visual Methodologies: Beyond the Written and towards the Sensory": South-South Exchange Programme

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SEPHIS, the South-South exchange programme for research on the history of development, offers grants to its workshop on questions surrounding the use of documentary film, video recordings, photographic imaging, and voice recordings, among others. The workshop hopes to examine what underlies "this movement beyond the written and what relationships to the word are assumed in such processes of knowledge production and strategies for promoting social change." The workshop will be held in Alexandria, Egypt, April 15-24 2011.


SEPHIS is seeking a group of 12-15 young scholars and intellectuals of social movements (activists) from different parts of the Global South. Three experts in the field of visual methodologies from the South will guide the workshop sessions and work with selected candidates in refining their projects. Participants will be drawn from 1) students enrolled in MA and/or PhD programmes in the Global South; and 2) researchers engaged in local non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and social movements who aim to utilise visual methods in their programme of research and action.

“This workshop hopes to address the following questions in the form of training and dialogue with young scholars in the Global South:

  • What epistemological questions and assumptions are embedded in the move towards the visual and/or the sensory?
  • What methodological concerns are at stake?
  • What constitutes the visual and the sensory and what relationships prevail between them? What can visual knowledge tell us about particular facades of social realities?
  • What is the historicity of visual knowledge and its deployment in social science and among members of civil society
  • What are the social conditions of production that inform the recourse to the visual and what political economies shape its production?”



“SEPHIS will cover travel and accommodation expenses of selected candidates and provide access to workshop supporting material. SEPHIS has been engaged in networking among researchers across the Global South since 1994. The fundamental goal of the programme is to encourage researchers located in the South to expand their scholarly horizons and to cultivate links with their colleagues in other parts of the South. The objective of the SEPHIS programme is to support dialogue and collaboration between researchers from the South with their respective visions of development and history, to encourage comparative research, and to strengthen research capacity in the South.”

Application Info

For further information, please contact either:

Hanan Sabea, hsabea@aucegypt.edu

Mark Westmoreland, mrw@aucegypt.edu

To apply, please send the following material to the email addresses above:

  1. Updated CV
  2. 2,000 word description of project/proposal outlining:
    • the main questions of inquiry
    • how and why visual methods and techniques are pertinent to the project
    • which texts/interlocutors have been central in shaping the use of visual approaches in the project
Date
Source

Email from Jacqueline Rutte to The Communication Initiative on January 13 2011.