January 31, 2006

ADVERTISING / RESOURCES: Childcatchers - the tricks to push unhealthy food to children

Kids' food campaign

We're calling for an end to the irresponsible marketing of unhealthy foods to children.

Underhand marketing tricks are increasingly being used to target children, and parents may not even be aware that it's happening.

From fast food brands embedded in top online games to branded playgrounds, the marketing techniques used to promote foods high in fat, sugar and salt directly to children are getting more sophisticated.

Nearly one third of two to 15 year-olds in England are now classed as overweight or obese. It's time the food and marketing industries acknowledged the roles they play.

Which? believes that irresponsible marketing of foods high in fat, sugar and salt to children has to stop. If you agree, join our campaign now.

Childcatchers
Our report, Childcatchers - the tricks used to push unhealthy food to children, (available below), exposes the top twelve marketing techniques used to push junk food to children, including viral marketing, competitions and games. Here are a few examples. (SEE BELOW FOR A LINK TO THE FULL TEXT)
 

Brands in ConTXT

Mobile phone marketing reaches young people directly, in a format they relate to. In 2003 a promotion for Fanta soft drink offered the chance to text a special code in a competition to win a mobile phone. Fanta contains the equivalent of nearly nine teaspoons of sugar per can.
 

Playing with your food

We found a McDonalds Play Food set on sale in Argos with plastic burgers, nuggets and shakes for children to play at assembling and selling. The only healthy items were a plastic tomato slice and lettuce leaf for putting in a burger.
 

Net gains

Online games and branded websites appeal directly to children's interests. www.mouthwateringtv.co.uk offers 'mouthwatering' gossip, competitions and games... and plenty of mentions of Starburst sweets. Competitions allow the company to collect email addresses for future promotions.

_____________________________
Which? campaigning

Which?'s nutrition campaigning aims to help make healthy choices easy choices for consumers. We're not campaigning against marketing in itself, but against the way food companies are using their considerable influence to make parents' lives harder. They're stacking up long-term health problems for our children, and washing their hands of the responsibility for the results.

Why now?
This year is a crucial one for this issue. The industry knows it's under pressure, and the Government has promised to legislate if there hasn't been real progress by 2007.

We want to see responsible marketing. We want to make sure that any voluntary codes of conduct the industry comes up with are strong enough to protect children, and that if they aren't, that the Government takes robust action.

Support the campaign
Sign up now and share your views to help us show the industry and Government that consumers really want things to change.
 
 
 
_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
Tel./Fax: +49 2365 502480
Mobile: +49 176 23107083
Email: cschuepp@unicef.org
URL: www.unicef.org/magic
Mailing list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/youthful-media
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

GRANTS: Swept Away TV receives a Grant from Journeys Shoes and SHINE.

One of the Swept Away TV members (Jeff Hendler) was also at the OneMinutesJr workshop in Connecticut in 2005. Here's his video:
 
 
Chris
 
 
Swept Away TV receives a Grant from Journeys Shoes and SHINE.

Boca Raton, FL -- (SBWIRE) -- 01/30/2006 -- Swept Away TV, a not for profit youth media program, announced today the receipt of a grant from Journeys Shoes and the SHINE program. Swept Away TV is a youth media program run entirely by young people who write, direct, produce and act in a 30 minute weekly television and internet program. Students involved with Swept Away TV developed a program to collect and distribute music cds to troops stationed in Iraq.

The SHINE program awards grants to programs that embrace diversity, teach tolerance and affect positive social change. Swept Away TV along with the Delray Beach Teen Center and Forgotten Soldiers collected music cds and other tolietry items to box and ship to servicemen and women in Iraq. Members of all 3 organizations packed boxes and made cards to send to the soliders abroad. The grant will enable the program, called Music for the Troops, to continue.

Swept Away TV, headed by college freshman Zac Rich, along with director Jeff Hendler and Producer Amanda Rich, is a not for profit organization formed to provide youth with career experiences and training in media. Formed in 2000, the organization has produced 6 seasons of their award-winning television series Swept Away TV.

Alumni of the program have gone on to college scholarships at prestigious universities such as the University of Miami, Florida State University, and New York University and have worked for companies such as MTV, VH1, Comedy Central and PBS. The young production company has done interviews with over 300 rock stars such as Maroon 5, Fall out Boy, John Mayer, Hoobastank, Taking Back Sunday and Avril Lavigne. They produce weekly podcasts which are available for free download online at the Itunes Store.

"We are always looking for cast and crew members with diverse viewpoints and ideas," said Rich, 19. "We have college students who drive 5 hours to meet and shoot with us. "Every year we have students from Orlando, Gainsville and Jacksonville who are part of our cast and crew, and they say they wouldn't miss it!" said Zac. Interested young people can contact the show through their website at www.sweptawaytv.com or by email at sweptawaytv@bellsouth.net.

Learn more...www.sweptawaytv.com

About Swept Away TV
Swept Away TV is a not for profit 501c3 formed to promote media education and training for young people. Based in Boca Raton Florida, the organization works with over 3000 students each school year. 22 Episodes of Swept Away TV are produced each school year and distributed to 64 television marketsin the US.

Website: http://www.sweptawaytv.com

Journeys Shoes and SHINE

SHINE (Seeking Harmony in Neighborhoods Everyday) is a SHINE is a non-profit organization that helps young people use music, art, technology and sports to take a stand, use your voice and impact your world. Journeys supports SHINE and is committed to handing out thousands of dollars in grants to individuals who want to make a positive impact on their community. Check out www.journeys.com/shine for more information about Journeys Shoes and Shine.

Website: http://www.shine.com/

Swept Away TV
Zac Rich
Host/Editor
email: sweptawaytv@bellsouth.net
phone: 561-241-9110

Swept Away TV
Nancy Rich
Director
email: nrich@sweptawaytv.co
phone: 561-504-4995
 
_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
Tel./Fax: +49 2365 502480
Mobile: +49 176 23107083
Email: cschuepp@unicef.org
URL: www.unicef.org/magic
Mailing list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/youthful-media
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

January 27, 2006

AWARDS: Ukrainian teenager wins Staying Alive Foundation Award

Ukrainian teenager wins Staying Alive Foundation Award

Denis Stepura (19), from Kiev, is among the winner of this year's Staying Alive competition. The awards are given to young people as well as youth organizations engaged in grass roots HIV/AIDS awareness, education and prevention campaigns. Denis is the only winner from Europe. All other winners come from Africa, Asia and Latin America.

Over 200 nominations were received representing 48 countries. SAF worked with international NGO?s to identify exemplary programs at the grassroots level. Finally, 25 young people and 4 organizations were chosen as winners - among them Denis and his idea to develop a specialized informational web-site for children and adolescents on HIV and AIDS prevention.

It is not the first time that Denis and his NGO "Children's Voice" is making the headlines.

FULL ARTICLE AT http://www.unicef.org/ceecis/reallives_3796.html

_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
Tel./Fax: +49 2365 502480
Mobile: +49 176 23107083
Email: cschuepp@unicef.org
URL: www.unicef.org/magic
Mailing list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/youthful-media
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

TRAINING: Developing Journalistic Approach Toward Child (TURKEY)

Developing Journalistic Approach Toward Child

About 40 reporters and NGO representatives participated in the training seminar on Reporting on Children's Rights by BIA² and UNICEF in Ankara. The violations in the stories were discussed and prospects probed for a child-friendly media.


BIA News Center
26/01/2006    Kemal OZMEN

BİA (Istanbul) - Local reporters rallied in Ankara for developing journalistic approach towards covering children's issues.

"Establishing a Countrywide Network for Monitoring and Covering Media Freedom and Independent Journalism" (BIA²) Project by the IPS Communications Foundation and the Turkey Unit of the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) organized the third of the training seminar series on Reporting on Children's Rights in Ankara on January 21-22.

About 40 local reporters, representatives of non-governmental organizations, and academicians discussed possibilities for a child-friendly media and children's participation in the media, on the basis of rights reporting.

There were heated discussions on children who have been pushed into committing crimes and the media's violations of rights when covering issues about children.

The local media will be more sensitive

The participants agreed that children are not only the adults of the future or members of the family, but individuals who have certain rights in the society. Through a "letter of commitment" they signed after the training, the reporters pledged to "fulfill their responsibilities as members of the media, to implement the rights outlined in the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child."

In this letter of commitment, the participants promised to "pay attention not to violate children's rights when reporting about children, to try and protect the children's freedom of expression and their right to express their opinion on issues that concern them."

They also promised to produce a certain number of "news reports or interviews about children, or about issues that would raise awareness about children's rights in the next six months" and to spend effort to get these news reports or interviews published by the media company they work at.

Hosta: The media should take upon the role of being inquisitive and supervisory

The training began with BIA² Project Advisor Nadire Mater talking about the BIA project, and Sema Hosta, who is responsible of the UNICEF Communications Program, talking about UNICEF's New Country Programme.

Hosta drew attention to the fact that the media's mission is not only to report but also to be effective in being inquisitive and supervisory.

Hosta underlined that the media, and especially the local media, has a big responsibility in advancing children's rights. She said the most important experience of UNICEF was to work locally and expressed the fact that conditions can be very different even in regions that are geographically very close to each other.

She said the local media has a lot of say especially in campaigns. Hosta stated that the local media acted much faster and more effectively than the national media in the "Come on Girls, to School Campaign" launched to encourage girls to go to school, for example.

Geldof: Many people are not aware of the United Nations (UN) Convention on the Rights of the Child

"Many people in the world are not aware of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child," said Lynn Geldof, the UNICEF Europe and Central Asia Communications Adviser, who attended the training seminar.

"And very little people know that the two countries that did not ratify the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child are the USA and Somalia."

Geldof said Turkey, as a country that has ratified the Convention is obliged to present periodical reports to the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child in Geneva. "The preparation of the report is a very important process because it harmonizes national regulations with the Convention," said Geldof.

Geldof said that the alternative reports by non-governmental organizations are the voices of the civil society and serve as a social control mechanism on issues not covered by the government reports.

"The media can fulfill its responsibility by making the government accountable to children," said Geldof, adding that the media should respect the privacy and rights of the children when talking to them, or writing about them.

Onat: Equal responsibility for a point of view that has a focus on children

Yasemin Onat, a lawyer from the Antalya Bar Association made the first presentation on Saturday on "Children's Rights and Reporting." During her presentation, she talked about the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, the UN Millennium Development in Turkey, children's rights as the subject of the news report, and the media's handling of children.

Onat said that the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child oversees four basic rights of the child: The right to live develops, protect and participate.

She said that a child-centered perspective views children as active individuals, active members of the society.

Onat said there is a very widespread belief that the parents carry all the responsibility of the child. But she stated that the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child imposes equal responsibility to teachers, law and healthcare workers, state institutions, politics, budget, NGOs, media and international institutions and regulations.

She said the system would collapse unless all the aforementioned fully protect the children and fulfill their responsibilities.

"Legal notions that are not used correctly legitimize rights violations. Under the law, children under 18 cannot be questioned. Children under 12 do not have criminal liability. They cannot be called a 'criminal'."

Onat said all investigations that involve children should be confidential and closed to press and public.

"Article 17 of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child regulate the children's right to obtain information, documents and news from means of mass communication.

* Information and documents that comply with the needs of the child.

* The publications should not have a harming or labeling effect.

The participants analyzed the expectations of the children, families, society and media managers' expectations from the media during the "Role of Press" workshop directed by trainer.

Cangoz: Language is a subjective instrument

On Saturday afternoon, Assistant Associate Prof. Dr. Incilay Cangoz from the Communications Department of the Anadolu University, made a presentation on "Children as the Source of News, Ethics, Violations of Children's Rights in the Media."

Dr. Cangoz said the media produces representations in the public space and these representations gain a social meaning. She underlined the importance of what is being chosen as representation and how it is being communicated.

She said that children are only subjects of the news on religious holidays, children's days, and at the beginning of school years.

She argued that children, who are viewed as objects of consumption, are presented as 'villains' in the media. She said the media's economy-politics, the codes of professional journalism, the hierarchical structure of the media production, sticking to certain sources and the use of masculine-language, all play a role in this.

"We perceive the world, ourselves and our surroundings with the language we create," said Cangoz. "We have to be careful when creating meanings." She examined news clips with participants.

Degirmencioglu: We need to think collectively

Associate-Professor Dr. Serdar Degirmencioglu of the Children's Rights Coalition, made a presentation after Cangoz, on "Children's Representation in the Media."

He expressed that participation is a basic right of the children and talked about the possibilities of children's participation in the media.

Degirmencioglu said research shows that children prefer the Internet and television. "There is no place for newspapers in their preferences, if the newspapers continue to ignore children, they will have no future."

Degirmencioglu said participation means, having a say in the decision-making process, to be influential, to have the opportunity to actively intervene, and to be able to work with adults.

Working with children means "less filtering, new ideas and creativity," added Degirmencioglu. He argued that the newspapers should embrace the attitude of making a difference instead of protecting the system and highlighted the advantages of the local media:

"The national media, because of its sterile structure, is distant from the children. But the local media has many opportunities."

Degirmencioglu gave examples participation of children in the media. The participation of young people in the local "Bush Radio" in South Africa, the publication of the "Agustos" (August) newspaper by the young people who were affected by the 1999 earthquake, and the storesoup.com, which is prepared by children and edited by adults in the US, are successful examples of "working together."

Duran: the media should stop producing the perception of child in society

On the second day of the training, BIA Project Advisor Nadire Mater talked about the bianet Web site, and BIA Children's Rights Editor Kemal Ozmen talked about the Children's Web site.

Ragip Duran from the Communications Department of Galatasaray University, conducted a workshop on "Violations of Children's Rights in the Media, Covering Children's Issues and Conducting Interviews with Children."

Duran, in a presentation before the workshop, advocated that the media recreates the society's perception of children. He said the notions about children, who are usually limited to ages 0-18, are not properly known and added this negatively affects the news reports.

He said it is very important for the media to correctly structure the notion and image of the child in fighting against prejudices.

"It is very dangerous to consider the child as 'the other,'" said Duran. He drew attention to the fact that children are frequently subjected to violence, discrimination and are exploited for pornography.

Duran said there are not many differences between interviewing children and interviewing adults but added the reporter must pay attention to certain issues when the interviewee is a child.

After discussing with participants what these issues may be, Duran listed what a reporter must do when interviewing a child:

* The child must be regarded as an independent individual,

* The child must be informed before the interview,

* The reporter must get permission for the interview,

* The reporter must choose a place where the child would feel comfortable,

* The questions must be clear and proceed from general to particular

* The language should be simple and understandable,

* The reporter must avoid being accusatory and should ask objective questions,

* The reporter must not be sentimental and should keep an emotional distance,

* The reporter must confirm the information taken from the child

The participants broke into four groups after the workshop and analysed the violations of children's rights in the media by using news clips.

UNICEF representative Lynn Geldof made a presentation after the workshop and talked about the importance of correct information about the avian influenza and the points that the media should pay attention to when covering this issue.

Criticisms and proposals

After the training seminar, participants presented their criticisms and proposals.

All participants said they found the training very fruitful and added they would share what they have learned with their colleagues.

There were criticisms on the technical problems that caused the training to be interrupted from time to time, and that the seminar was too short.

The participants asked for the training seminar to continue and to be conducted in their provinces as well.

Participants

Afyonkarahisar: Mustafa Daghan (Goruntu newspaper), Onur Zelveci (Odak newspaper), Selahattin Celikkol (ER TV), Sait Karaduman (Anadolu News Agency),

Ankara: Mete Karakul (Newspaper Ankara) Berin Canli (Oz-Ge Der), Janset Bay (Oz-Ge Der), Recep Dogan (SHCEK), Cilem Kaya (Birgun newspaper), Turkay Asma (Ankara Bar Association Children's Rights Commission), Melika Komurcu (Ankara Bar Association), Ismail Yuce (Manset News), Abdullah Irem (Imaj radio), Bedia Boran (Ankara Bar Association), Sevilay Celenk (Communications Department of Ankara University), Irfan Aktan (Communications Department of Ankara University/ bianet)

Aksaray: Fikret Irmak (ART), Nurcan Yolalan (ART)

Bolu: Huseyin Aykan (owner of Newspaper Express) , Bedriye Ensari (Newspaper Express)

Corum: Gunes Cuhadar Corum Haber newspaper

Hakkari: Sevket Yilmaz Yuksekova news

Cankiri: Ali Kor (Bizim Cankiri newspaper)

Konya: Umit Kalkan (Press Office of Konya Metropolitan Municipality), Mehmet Yasa (KTV), Fikret Malkoc (Memleket newspaper), Hasan Bacaksiz (Anadolu Gundem), Muhammet Sorgun (Sun TV)

Nevsehir: Hasan Sozlu (Metropol Haber), Adem Ozdemir (Gul FM), Mediha Iven (Goreme TV)

Nigde: Ahmet Oncu (Nigde Haber newspaper), Muhammet Yilmaz (Nigde Haber newspaper), Fevzi Buyukkural (Anadolu Haber newspaper), Fatih Kizilkaya (Hamle newspaper), Zonguldak: Zuriye Iskenderoglu (Inanis newspaper). Ismail Cizmeci (Hamle newspaper) ((KO/AD/EA/YE)
_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
Tel./Fax: +49 2365 502480
Mobile: +49 176 23107083
Email: cschuepp@unicef.org
URL: www.unicef.org/magic
Mailing list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/youthful-media
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

January 26, 2006

ADVERTISING: Soft drink makers promise to stop targeting children (EUROPE)

Soft drink makers promise to stop targeting children

David Gow in Brussels
Thursday January 26, 2006
The Guardian


Soft drinks makers in Europe yesterday agreed to stop targeting children under the age of 12 in advertising campaigns as part of a series of measures to help prevent obesity among young people.

Members of the Union of European Beverages Associations (Unesda) such as Cadbury Schweppes, Coca-Cola and PepsiCo drew up a voluntary code of conduct which also includes commitments to stop direct commercial activity in primary schools and offer more low-calorie drinks.

"Unesda and its members recognise public concerns about today's health issues, particularly the rising levels of obesity and chronic diseases related to poor diets and lack of physical activity," it said in a statement to the EU.

FULL ARTICLE:
http://media.guardian.co.uk/advertising/story/0,,1695052,00.html
(free registration required)

_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
Tel./Fax: +49 2365 502480
Mobile: +49 176 23107083
Email: cschuepp@unicef.org
URL: www.unicef.org/magic
Mailing list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/youthful-media
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

January 24, 2006

TRAINING: Young Saudis to experience newspaper trends (SAUDI-ARABIA)

Young Saudis to experience newspaper trends

Jan 20, 2006

A newspaper in Saudi Arabia is now being produced by young people, for young people. The name is Shams, which means ?the Sun? and is an Arabic abbreviation for youth, variety and Saudi.

Launched in December, young Saudi journalists are managing and producing the 40-page paper, two pages of which are intended for Saudi college students. Battal Al-Qaus, editor-in-chief, told Al-Arabiya that the newspaper is different from others, since it?s the country?s first to target young people. Al-Qaus said the newspaper has attracted experienced journalists while also recruiting talented online and message board writers.

Mufeed Al-Nuesir, the paper?s graphics director, said the predominantly orange newspaper and its simple design should resemble a Web site more than a newspaper. The overall goal is to overcome the lack of interest in newspapers among young Saudis.

Arab Press Network: http://www.arabpressnetwork.org/articles.php?id=311.
Al-Arabyia.net (in Arabic): http://www.alarabiya.net/Articles/2005/12/09/19338.htm.

View in عربي

SOURCE: http://www.ijnet.org/FE_Article/NewsArticle.asp?CId=304369&UILang=1&CIDLang=1

_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
Tel./Fax: +49 2365 502480
Mobile: +49 176 23107083
Email: cschuepp@unicef.org
URL: www.unicef.org/magic
Mailing list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/youthful-media
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

January 23, 2006

IT: Educating parents of techno-savvy kids

Educating parents of techno-savvy kids
By: Dr Pieter Streicher

Western society has become more and more permissive with the emphasis on the "freedom of expression" of individuals. However, these consenting rights need to be balanced by the protection of children's rights. Gone are the days when parental control meant keeping your kids off the neighbour's farm. Today parents need to be vigilant and protect children from harmful media content.

Parental vigilance of media is becoming increasingly difficult. Adult magazines abound in stores and adult videos, adult movies on TV and adult websites are accessible. Now, even cell phones can download adult content.

The availability of adult mobile content has raised many concerns that children may access explicit adult media content such as logos, video clips or wallpapers via cell phones. These concerns indicate that there is need for suitable regulations and parental control to protect children from adult mobile content.

It is my view that parental control should compliment the efforts made to regulate mobile adult content. Parents are not alone in safe-guarding the mobile habits of children.

The mobile network operators and the wireless application service provider's association (WASPA) are working hard to introduce suitable measures to protect children from adult content on mobile phones.

FULL ARTICLE AT http://www.bizcommunity.com/Article/196/16/8995.html

_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
Tel./Fax: +49 2365 502480
Mobile: +49 176 23107083
Email: cschuepp@unicef.org
URL: www.unicef.org/magic
Mailing list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/youthful-media
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

January 20, 2006

EVENTS / INTERNET: Blogs, moblogs, and vblogs

European Safer Internet Day Conference 2006 - February 7th 2006

Blogs, moblogs, and vblogs

User generated content, communications and services represent a significant proportion of the material accessible online. Children and young people are increasingly becoming active consumers, creators, and producers of user generated content, moderating and disseminating content in both online and related offline environments.

In doing so children and young people exercise fundamental human rights online to express, seek, receive and share information however they choose in a constantly evolving online environment.

FULL ARTICLE AT: http://www.saferinternet.org/ww/en/pub/insafe/news/articles/0106/uk.htm

________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
Tel./Fax: +49 2365 502480
Mobile: +49 176 23107083
Email: cschuepp@unicef.org
URL: www.unicef.org/magic
Mailing list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/youthful-media
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

January 19, 2006

BROADCASTING: 'Little progress' on children's TV (THAILAND)

'Little progress' on children's TV

ANJIRA ASSAVANONDA

Academics yesterday blamed a lack of progress made in improving the content of television programmes for children on a lack of integration among state agencies. Most TV channels continue to run programmes considered inappropriate for young people, they said.

Apinya Vejayachai, dean of the faculty of social welfare at Thammasat University, said far too many panels had been set up to handle the issue, including committees under the Prime Minister's Office, the Culture Ministry, the Education Ministry and the Ministry of Social Development and Human Security.

However, instead of working in unison to integrate the best measures for the best possible outcome, they appeared to working independently of each other.

FULL ARTICLE AT http://www.bangkokpost.com/News/19Jan2006_news09.php

_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
Tel./Fax: +49 2365 502480
Mobile: +49 176 23107083
Email: cschuepp@unicef.org
URL: www.unicef.org/magic
Mailing list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/youthful-media
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

ADVERTISING: Youth marketing: Time to take more responsibility?

Youth marketing: Time to take more responsibility?

Suzy Bashford Marketing 11 May 2005

 A groundswell of anger at improper advertising aimed at children means marketers must rethink their use of risque advertising.

Sex, violence and spiralling debt. The roll call reads like a guide to misspent youth, and marketers should not be surprised to hear they are being blamed for encouraging such a lifestyle. Marketers are targeting children with inappropriate advertising more than ever, and a growing volume of protest from parents and authorities threatens the industry with shunned brands and unprecedented legislation if they fail to change their ways.

Supermarket Asda incurred the wrath of outraged parents last month for targeting girls as young as nine with see-through black lingerie. It later withdrew the range, blaming an ordering error. Homelessness charity Centrepoint recently branded the credit card industry 'unconscionable' when it revealed that marketers were urging young homeless people to apply for credit cards with incentives such as cash upfront and free trainers. And Reebok has been lambasted for glamorising gun crime following its high-profile TV ad starring US rapper 50 Cent.

There is no doubt that young people make potentially valuable customers.

FULL ARTICLE AT http://www.brandrepublic.com/bulletins/dm/article/474965/youth-marketing-time-responsibility/

_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
Tel./Fax: +49 2365 502480
Mobile: +49 176 23107083
Email: cschuepp@unicef.org
URL: www.unicef.org/magic
Mailing list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/youthful-media
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

January 16, 2006

PROJECTS: The Voice of the Future (SIERRA LEONE)

The Voice of the Future

The success of our living is measured not by what we can accumulate for ourselves, but what we can bestow upon our fellow travelers on life?s tough travel.

W. Phillip Keller

In late 1997, a sixteen-year-old boy walked into Talking Drum Studio in Monrovia, Liberia. He had an idea, and he needed Talking Drum Studio to make it happen. Talking Drum Studio, a project of Search for Common Ground, produces- and teaches others to produce-radio programs.

Through news, feature stories, music and soap operas, talking Drum Studio aims to encourage dialogue and defuse violence.

But this boy had more than just a good idea. He had spirit, perspective and a powerful message. He and a small group of children had created the Children?s Bureau of Information to give a voice to the children of Liberia, to help other children-their peers-recover from seven years of civil war. Before long, the Children?s Bureau of Information and Talking Drum Studio were producing a weekly show titled Golden Kids News, which was aired by a local radio station. The impact was almost immediate: Children?s voices were being broadcast, and people stopped to listen..

Golden Kids was such a hit that, before long, there were more people walking through the doors of Talking drum Studio. This time, it was the U.N. High Commission on Refugees asking whether we would produce another program. The result, Children?s World, was a program ?by and for children affected by war.? This weekly program shared the experiences of children who were displaced by war and were trying to rebuild their lives. With adult support, the children of Children?s World broadcast poetry, songs, storytelling, news and music to thousands of listeners every week.

We started a second Talking Drum Studio in Freetown, Sierra Leone, in April 2000. Golden Kids News was the first program we produced. The impact in Sierra Leone was even more striking than it had been in Liberia. Soldiers in the U.N. peacekeeping mission, market people and taxi drivers all stopped by the studio to comment on the children?s programs.

Five years later, thirteen radio stations in Sierra Leone are carrying Golden Kids News and are frequently asked to replay each program. A nationwide survey conducted in 2004 showed that over 88 percent of the respondents listened to Golden Kids News and almost all of them (98 percent) reported that the program changed their attitudes toward the role of children in Sierra Leone. Listeners also thought the program ?made children aware of options besides warfare and contributed to the healing process after trauma.?

In What?s Going On, a film produced for the United Nations, Michael Douglas interviewed one of the Golden Kids reporters in Sierra Leone. This young man had been a former child soldier who joined Golden Kids News as a way to put his horrific past behind him and to help the other estimated fifteen thousand child combatants. ?I interviewed some of my colleagues to explain their stories,? he explained to Mr. Douglas, so the people in the community, they would be able to accept them back.?

Search for Common Ground expanded children?s radio programming to Angola, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo and is making its methodologies available to organizations around the world. The remarkable story of Golden Kids New, Children?s World and the Children Bureau of Information often surprises people. As a producer at Talking Drum Studio said: ? Very often, adults believe that kids do not have any thoughts of their own. This is a fallacy. What we have discovered is that children do have their own fears and concerns, and, if given a chance, they express their thoughts very well.?

The first time I watched a Children?s World program being produced I Liberia, I was immediately impresses by the image of a small child with large headphones speaking into an even larger microphone: ?My name is Brandy Crawford, and this is Children?s World, a program produced by children for children affected by war.? I suddenly understood on a visceral level the power of the programming. I struggled to hold back tears as the innocence and purity of a child reaching out to other children in the face of horrible atrocities stirred my own heart: to compassion, beauty and hope, the very essence of being human, all of which will need to be cultivated if we are to move beyond war.

As for that sixteen-year-old boy who walked into Talking Drum Studio five years ago, he went on to become a Child Ambassador for UNICEF and is now on a full scholarship at the university. But the most important of his achievements must be that, while still only a child himself, he created a platform for children everywhere to voice their hopes and fears, and to teach us all something about the human spirit.

Philip M. Hellmich


Search for Common Ground (Washington DC)
1601 Connecticut Ave. NW, #200
Washington, DC 20009-1035
Phone: (202)265-4300
Fax: (202)232-6718
E-mail: search@sfcg.org

Search for Common Ground (Brussels)
Rue Belliard 205 bte 13
B-1040 Brussels, Belgium
Phone: (+32 2) 736 7262 Fax: (+32 2) 732 3033
E-mail: search@sfcg.be
 
_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

INTERNET: Majority of UAE youth addicted to the Internet

Majority of UAE youth addicted to the Internet
By Amira Agarib

14 January 2006

DUBAI ? After television, the Internet consumes an enormous part of people's time.

According to Etisalat officials, more than a quarter of the population in the UAE is using the Internet out of which 44 per cent are families. Each member of the family is using the Internet at least for four hours. A majority of the youth have become addicted to it. Critics call it the Internet addiction, and say that it is highly dangerous.

FULL ARTICLE AT:  http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticle.asp?xfile=data/theuae/2006/January/theuae_January293.xml&section=theuae

_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

January 13, 2006

OPPORTUNITIES: OneMinutesJr workshop for young people from AUSTRIA - ITALY - SLOVENIA - GERMANY - HUNGARY - CZECH REPUBLIC

Participate in the one minutes jr. workshop in Salzburg from May 28 - June
1st!!!!

Would you like to create your own one minute video in Salzburg, Austria? If
you are between 12 and 20 and live in Austria, Italy, Slovenia, Germany,
Hungary or the Czech Republic you can! We are looking for enthusiastic
youngsters who are interested in media, want to express themselves
creatively, are eager to learn new things, and would like to make new
friends. All travel and accomodation expenses will be covered by the
European Cultural Foundation, so just fill in the application form showing
your motivation and reasons for wanting to participate.

Download the form here:
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/images/uploaded/files/workshop_application_salzburg.doc
Send it to raya@theoneminutesjr.org.
The deadline is April 20th:
Website: www.theoneminutesjr.org

The one minutes jr. workshop will be part of the netdays Austria 05/06
Festival (May 31 - June 2). Over 350 youngsters from Austria and bordering
countries will be partcipating in various web and video workshops.
Youngsters aged 14 to 25 can submit their web and video projects on this
year's theme "expedition:future" on the netdays website till April, 21,2006.
Within the Festival, the best projects will be presented and awarded with
prize money. The videos which are produced during the one minutes jr.
workshop will be screened on June 1st at the award ceremony ending with a
great good-bye party.

For more information on netdays: www.netdays.at

_________________________________________

Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator

Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany

Tel./Fax: +49 2365 502480
Email: cschuepp@unicef.org
URL: www.unicef.org/magic
Mailing list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/youthful-media

The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.

The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites
linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the
United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

NEWS: Popular cartoon character helps children cope with natural disasters

Popular cartoon character helps children cope with natural disasters

By Kun Li

NEW YORK, 12 January 2006 ? Meena is an eight-year-old cartoon character. She goes to school and lives with her family in a small village in India. Conceived and produced by UNICEF, Meena has appeared in more than 30 episodes that deal with topics including health and hygiene, the dangers of trafficking and children?s rights.

The latest episode, ?Life Has Changed?, aims at helping children cope with natural disasters like the 2004 tsunami and the Pakistan earthquake.

?We know from our experience in all sorts of disasters, not just the tsunami, that children suffer tremendous psychological damage,? said Dr. Esther Guluma, UNICEF Deputy Regional Director in South Asia. ?The Meena film and books, which were done with the help of the Japanese government, will help caregivers, teachers, parents, and communities understand how to deal with children as well as help the children understand their feelings after a disaster.?

In ?Life Has Changed? Meena meets a little girl, Neela, who is sad and withdrawn because she was separated from her family during an earthquake. Meena takes her home, talks to her and plays with her. Meena?s family also steps in to help find Neela?s family. Luckily, Neela is finally reunited with her parents.

Today, Meena can be seen throughout South Asia, as well as in countries like Laos and Bhutan. The latest episode on dealing with disasters was developed with the help of children who experienced the tsunami. Their involvement was essential to teach other children about suffering, loss and fear in ways they can easily understand.

?I think the reason Meena is so popular, particularly with little children, is that it conveys the messages in a very subtle way,? explains Meena?s creator Ram Mohan. ?The formula has been about 90 per cent entertainment and 10 per cent messages. The messages are beautifully sugar coated with a lot of humour and fun. The storytelling and characters are also very interesting.?

Meena is a good role model for children. She is determined to go to school and dares to confront the obstacles. ?Meena says: ?why don?t you send me to school? Why do you make me work so much?? remarked a teacher from India. ?Because Meena has the courage to ask such questions other girls are asking the same questions too.?

SOURCE: http://unicef.org/infobycountry/rosa_30693.html

LEARN MORE ABOUT MEENA: http://www.unicef.org/meena/

_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

January 12, 2006

NEWS / PROJECTS: Magazine launch: A new-look KOOR & (SOMALIA)

SOURCE: UNICEF Somalia

Magazine launch: A new-look KOOR magazine was launched in Bossaso, Puntland, in December. The youth magazine, supported by UNICEF, focuses on a variety of issues of interest to young people including HIV/AIDS. Copies of the re-designed magazine were distributed to youth groups across the country. The magazine is produced in Somaliland.

Youth broadcasting: production of eight video/radio programmes commenced through organizations that UNICEF has supported through capacity building for audio and video production. The organizations are under the umbrella of the Somaliland National Youth Organization (SONYO). The programmes focus on issues.of concern to the youth.

---

Finally, here's a November 2005 article about KOOR:

________

Youth review HIV/AIDS magazine

Hargeisa, Northwest Somalia (?Somaliland?) November 2005 ?Twenty-two young people from across Somalia recently met in Hargeisa, Northwest Somalia (?Somaliland?) to discuss ways in which they could reach more Somali youth and educate them about HIV/AIDS prevention and control.

The group, comprising eleven males and eleven females aged between 17 and 24 years were at a workshop facilitated by UNICEF to explore how KOOR ? quarterly youth magazine - could become a more effective vehicle to articulate their concerns on the issue. Among them were Mohamed Deeq, 22, from Bosasso, Northeast Somalia (Puntland) and Zamzam Abdi, 20, a female participant from Borama, ?Somaliland?. Though they came from areas 800km apart, these participants shared a common vision: to make KOOR a valuable resource in their arsenal against HIV/AIDS.

KOOR is the Somali term for the wooden bell that adorns the most prized camel in the herd.  The owner keeps track of the grazing herd by the sound of the bell. KOOR aims to toll for Somali youth.

According to Mohamed, KOOR fills a gap left open by local media which, he says, rarely give enough prominence to HIV/AIDS. Zamzam sees KOOR as a means to reach more girls. ?Almost all Somali girls are exposed to harmful practices like female genital mutilation (FGM) which puts them at higher risk of contracting HIV,? she said. ?Challenges such as early marriages and lack of access to education should be discussed.?

UNICEF has supported the production of KOOR magazine since 2003. It held the recent workshop to discuss ways of improving the magazine?s outlook and effectiveness. A recommendation from the workshop is for two editors (one male and one female) to be selected from each zone (Northwest, Northeast and Central/Southern Somalia) whose job it will be to identify and source stories.

Background to KOOR

With UNICEF support, KOOR was launched in 2003 by a group of young people in Somaliland to give youth access to the kind of information and skills they required for HIV prevention and participation in community mobilization activities. The young people involved in the start-up were initially members of a ?Youth and HIV/AIDS Network? who provided peer education on HIV/AIDS. The first issue of KOOR magazine was launched on 25 June 2003 and since then the magazine has been circulated among youth throughout Somalia.

Two thousand copies of the first issue were distributed in Hargeisa, Borama, Burao, Berbera and Gabiley in Somaliland and Bossaso in Puntland.

UNICEF assisted the young people in the development of guidelines for the magazine?s design, content, frequency, layout and distribution. The youth then appointed a 10-member committee of representatives from Hargeisa, Gabiley, Borama, Burao and Berbera in Somaliland and identified two people from each area as focal points for distribution, contribution of content and feedback to youth in their respective towns.

Somali youth groups in 2005 chose the Hargeisa Youth Development Association (HYDA) to coordinate the production and distribution of KOOR magazine. HYDA's support includes the provision of space, equipment and staff.

Issues covered by the magazine have included basic HIV/AIDS facts, female genital mutilation health issues, women?s development and life skills as well as entertainment, culture and world news. It also carries opinion pieces. 

For further information contact:

Jairus Ligoo ,  Project Officer , Youth, UNICEF Somalia. P.O. Box 44145, Nairobi ? KENYA. Tel: +254 20 623950   Fax: +254 20 623965. Email: jligoo@unicef.org

SOURCE: http://www.unicef.org/somalia/reallives_2139.html

_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

January 11, 2006

WEBSITES: two Portuguese blogs on youth, media & education

Educar Para Os Media - Um diário de Educação para os Media
O Educar Para Os Media destina-se primordialmente a pais e professores mas tenho a certeza que qualquer pessoa que regularmente (espero) me faça aqui uma visita, irá encontrar motivos de sobra para não dar por perdido o seu tempo.
Website: http://EducarParaOsMedia.blogspot.com
Contact: Vitor Relvas - educarparaosmedia@eiclicaqui.com
 
Educación para los Medios de Comunicación
La "audiencia" a quien se destina primordialmente el Educación para los Medios de Comunicación serán padres y profesores pero tengo la certidumbre que cualquier persona que regularmente me haga aquí una visita, irá a encontrar motivos de sobra para no dar por perdido su tiempo.
Website: http://educacionparalosmedios.blogspot.com
Contact: Vitor Relvas - educarparaosmedia@eiclicaqui.com
 
_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

OneMinutesJr videos from the Maldives online

Here are the online links to the OneMinutesJr films produced at the Malé
workshop in November 2005.

More about the workshop also at:

http://www.unicef.org/magic/users/news_archive_november_2005.html
http://www.unicef.org/magic/articles/maldives_workshop.html
www.theoneminutesjr.org

List of makers/films from the Malé workshop:

Abdullah Arafath - Paradise scream
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=586

Ahmed Naïf - The shopkeeper strikes back
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=594

Ali Rasheed - Blood for life
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=581

Athie - Metal doesn't bleed
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=584

Fathmath Nazyra - The pilot
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=592

Hamdhaan Abdul Ganee - Friends
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=582

Lenny Maskall - My Malé
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=585

Mohamed Nizam - The choice is yours
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=590

Fathmath Naaisha Nashid - Why not girls?
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=596

Zahuriyya Ali - Suck up the sun
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=589

Mariyem Zaida - Parents E
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=587

Zahuriyya Ali - Beach monologue
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=580

Shahuma Abdullah - The last Maldivian hero
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=591

Nawaz Mohamed - 4 steps to hell
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=577

Akif Ibrahim Rafeeq - 80,000 people - 3 courts
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=579

Alex Maskall - Same difference
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=588

Mohamed Vishal - 26 Dcember 2004
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=578

Ali Ghassan - Time to go
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=595

Mohamed Ali - The school of life
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=593

Fathmath Yusra - Happy?
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/public/index.php?thissection_id=10&movie_id=583
_________________________________________

Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator

Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany

Tel./Fax: +49 2365 502480
Email: cschuepp@unicef.org
URL: www.unicef.org/magic
Mailing list: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/youthful-media

The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.

The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites
linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the
United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

OPPORTUNITIES: OneMinutesJr workshop for young people from AUSTRIA - ITALY - SLOVENIA - GERMANY - HUNGARY - CZECH REPUBLIC

Participate in the one minutes jr. workshop in Salzburg from May 28 - June 1st!!!!

Would you like to create your own one minute video in Salzburg, Austria? If you are between 12 and 20 and live in Austria, Italy, Slovenia, Germany, Hungary or the Czech Republic you can! We are looking for enthusiastic youngsters who are interested in media, want to express themselves creatively, are eager to learn new things, and would like to make new friends. All travel and accomodation expenses will be covered by the European Cultural Foundation, so just fill in the application form showing your motivation and reasons for wanting to participate.

Download the form here:
http://www.theoneminutesjr.org/mmmcms/images/uploaded/files/workshop_application_salzburg.doc
Send it to raya@theoneminutesjr.org.
The deadline is April 20th:
Website: www.theoneminutesjr.org 

The one minutes jr. workshop will be part of the netdays Austria 05/06 Festival (May 31 - June 2). Over 350 youngsters from Austria and bordering countries will be partcipating in various web and video workshops. Youngsters aged 14 to 25 can submit their web and video projects on this year?s theme ?expedition:future? on the netdays website till April, 21,2006. Within the Festival, the best projects will be presented and awarded with prize money. The videos which are produced during the one minutes jr. workshop will be screened on June 1st at the award ceremony ending with a great good-bye party.

For more information on netdays:
www.netdays.at 
_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

January 9, 2006

EVENTS: Buster Film Festival (DENMARK)

Buster Film Festival Denmark

Festival dates for 2006: 8th - 15th September

Film submission form 2006 and regulations

Read about this year's film winners

The festival consists of an international and nordic selection of new children and youth films, and the formats are both feature films, short films, documentaries, and animation films. Besides the screenings there are workshops where children can learn filmmaking as well as seminars for film professionals.
BUSTER organises the official nordic children and youth film meeting for film profesionals, a task given to BUSTER by Scandinavian Films in the year 2003.

BUSTER is an international children?s film festival of a high standard, capable of attracting a huge audience, while creating a forum for international film professionals.
In the spring of 1999 the Centre of Children and Youth Film at the Danish Film Institute assembled a group of film workers affiliated with children?s films. They created the foundation for BUSTER and at the same time BUSTER Foundation was established with support from the Danish Film Institute.

With an annual recurring film festival that attracts a large and enthusiastic young audience, BUSTER wishes to place children? and youth film on the cultural agenda. BUSTER offers films of high artistic quality and is an essential alternative to the current cinema programmes for children. It is our hope that the BUSTER audiences will experience something extraordinary during the festival, that diversity within children?s films will become visible and that the young audience is strengthened in its ability to see, understand, and use moving pictures.
The film sections of the festival include:

? BUSTER Competition programme of 11 international children?s films
? BUSTER Competition programme of 11 international children?s short films
? BUSTER Competition programme of 11 international youth films
? BUSTER Competition programme of 11 international youth short films
? BUSTER Competition programme of European children and youth documentaries
? New Nordic Children?s and Youth film business meeting
? Theme Series
? Animation Programme

Founder:
The Danish Film Institute
On the initiative of:
Nordisk Film Biografer A/S, Nordisk Film Junior, the Danish Children?s and Youth Film Clubs, The National Film School of Denmark, Children of the City, A/S Dagbladet Politiken, Egmont Børnefilm, Danish Broadcasting Corporation, Children?s & Youth Department.

Board:
Per Nielsen, Anders Geertsen, Charlotte Giese, Poul Nesgaard, Peter Engel, Lotte Lindegaard, Ib Tardini.

Festival Director for BUSTER / Nordic children and youth film meeting:
Dionysos Reitz Kerasiotis

SOURCE: http://www.busterfilm.dk/

_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

ARTICLES: Youth Are Building Presence Inside WTO

Youth Are Building Presence Inside WTO

By Emily Freeburg, WireTap
Posted on January 6, 2006, Printed on January 9, 2006
http://www.alternet.org/story/30463/

Like much of civil society, youth participation at the World Trade Organization doesn't have a long history. In fact, its history is only a few weeks old. But at the 6th Ministerial Conference in Hong Kong (WTO 6), more than a dozen young people from all over the world attended the meeting with official accreditation, a forum previously exclusive to government negotiators. Hundreds more protested, with demonstrations at nearby Victoria Park, while others held a youth information booth at the fair trade center nearby.

Most young people know little about the World Trade Organization, and with the number of protests growing each year, the WTO has come to stand for everything negative about globalization, from exploitation of workers, outsourced jobs and overconsumption, to cultural change and environmental degradation. This year, instead of their usual posts at a nearby hotel, hundreds of nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) were allowed into the meeting, where many followed each step of the negotiations.

FULL ARTICLE AT http://www.alternet.org/wiretap/30463/

_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

January 7, 2006

BROADCASTING: Government to pour in additional budget for Children's TV programs (THAILAND)

Government to pour in additional budget for Children's TV programs

The Thai government is preparing to pour in additional budget for television programs that benefit children and youths, while it also aims to suppress unconstructive pornography by stringently enforcing the law.

According to Prime Minister's Office Minister SURANAND VEJJAJIVA (สุรนันท์ เวชชาชีวะ), Prime Minister THAKSIN SHINAWATRA will announce the government's policy for supporting constructive media for children and their families on Children's Day next week (Jan. 14th). All television channels will have to consider the images to be broadcast before actual airing.

Channel 11 has been assigned to arrange all children's programs for airing every day, and it will also offer the opportunities for children to conduct news and other interesting programs on weekends.

Minister SURANAND said that in the future, the government will arrange a budget to support television programs that would benefit children and youths.
 
_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

EVENTS: Cine star Ramya opens kids film fest (INDIA)

Cine star Ramya opens kids film fest

Mysore, Jan. 7 (RK&KCU)- The National Children's Film Festival, organised under the auspices of Children India, began this morning at Saraswathi theatre here.

Speaking after inaugurating the festival, cine actress Ramya opined that children's films will not only be educative for children but would also expose them to good culture.

Being overburdened with studies in school and home work, watching a good movie will definitely enliven the spirit in kids. Children should adopt the good theme of a movie in their daily life to make themselves better citizens tomorrow. Such film festivals should be held in every district, she suggested.

FULL ARTICLE: http://www.starofmysore.com/searchinfo.asp?search1=8379&search2=newsheadlines

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Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

January 5, 2006

NEWS: Bulgaria Films Own Prince & Pauper Story

Bulgaria Films Own Prince & Pauper Story

Lifestyle
The newest scenario of The Prince and the Pauper, Bulgaria-made, has won the hearts and minds of international audience.

The film by Mariana Evstatieva-Biolcheva was awarded the Grand Prix at the International Children's Film Festival in Minsk, Belarus.

The Prince and the Pauper's director was handed down the honorary statuette by Belarus Ambassador to Sofia.
 
 
_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________

EVENTS: The Tromsø International Film Festival -TIFF- 2006 (NORWAY)

The Tromsø International Film Festival -TIFF- 2006

January 16th to 22nd 2006

NUFF at TIFF

Same presedure as every year: NUFF cooperation with TIFF. Like in the last years will we screen a film program with all winner films, the workshop films and the documentary from NUFF 2005 at Cinema Fokus, a two hour program presented by NUFF. Also will we have our legendary NUFF lunch reception at the youth culture house TVIBIT. All young film interested people will have the possibility to meet the international and national guests at TIFF.

But not enough with that, we will arrange a seminar for young people with a known filmmaker. Former guests have been Jim Stark, the known film producer from USA, Margrete Olin who presented her film "Ungdommens Råskap" and Mike Leigh the legendary film director from England.

The NUFF-special this year will be film workshop. We will invite 6 - 8 young filmmakers between 15 and 20 years from Northern-Norway to Tromsø during the Tromsø International Film Festival January 16th to 22nd. This group shall produce a short film about TIFF in five days. The teacher will be Daniel Alegi from Sweden who was already one of the workshop leaders at NUFF 2005. The film will be screened at the outdoor cinema on Saturday and perhaps at the closing ceremony of the festival. Submit here?

On top of our cooperation with TIFF will be that we are responsible for the film program of Freeze Frame the outdoor cinema of the festival. There we will screen "The Best of NUFF" and youth cinema from the culture house TVIBIT. This will be a program about 12 hours in the middle of the city! You will find more information on www.tiff.no!

SOURCE: http://www.nuff.no/english/index.htm

_________________________________________
 
Chris Schuepp
Young People's Media Network - Coordinator
 
Youth Media Consulting GbR
c/o ECMC (European Centre for Media Competence)
Bergstr. 8 / 11th floor
D-45770 Marl - Germany
 
 
The YPMN is supported by UNICEF and hosted by the ECMC.
 
The opinions and views expressed in this message and/or articles & websites linked to from this message do not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
_________________________________________