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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Summary

This article explores the outcome of an event on "media literacy" which seeks to describe the United Kingdom media regulator, Ofcom. Sandy Starr's article frames the discussion when she starts with "'Literacy' is commonly understood as the ability to read and write, which is acquired as a key stage in child development. But what do the terms 'media literacy', 'emotional literacy' and 'political literacy' mean? And why is the UK's media regulator, the Office of Communications (Ofcom), so keen on promoting them?"

According to Sandy Starr, Ofcom is a media regulator which tries to "assist in interpreting the media, rather than to ban things because they're immoral or seditious, as an old-fashioned censor might do." Ofcom is actually following a law from the 2003 Communications Act 2003 which states that Ofcom has a "duty to promote media literacy." Starr states that Ofcom's intentions were "motivated chiefly by an anxiety, on the part of an isolated political elite, that the media enjoys greater public influence than politicians do..."

Starr uses an event entitled "Emotional and Political Literacy and the Media" to illustrate her point that "choice" is a word used by Ofcom in its pronouncements and initiatives which is in effect a "recipe for imposing officially sanctioned values upon people." At that event, a speaker Annette Hill, professor of media studies at the University of Westminster, presented research about the emotional responses of TV viewers in response to factual television programmes. She gave an example of children's distress to watching animals suffer while parents instead focused on an educational value. According to Starr, "Hill implied that the children were in some ways savvier than the parents, for recognising that these sorts of programmes are emotionally exploitative."

Other speakers included James Park, director of Antidote, the campaign for emotional literacy, and his colleague Barry Richards, professor of public communication at Bournemouth University. According to the article, "Park and Richards acknowledged the concern that these new forms of literacy could become an insidious means of seeking to engineer people's ideas and behaviour. They argued that the pursuit of emotional and political literacy is no authoritarian conspiracy, but rather a 'process', an ongoing, open-ended affair. Yet this just demonstrated how slippery and difficult to pin down these new literacy projects are. Vagueness is a convenient means of avoiding being held to account for one's interests and objectives."

At the end of the event, Ofcom's media literacy manager Robin Blake admitted that 'there is no clear and agreed definition of media literacy. And while Annette Hill believes it it useful to have these categories: 'media literacy', 'political literacy' and 'emotional literacy', the author Sally Starr contends that "the once meaningful category of 'literacy' to be left well alone, before it dissolves further into a sea of meaningless Ofcomspeak."

Source

sent to Young People's Media Network on November 26, 2004.